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The coronavirus years? Historical perspectives on COVID-19 and its aftermath

In this symposium, speakers will show how past policy was developed and implemented, what worked and what did not, and what implications this might have for the response to COVID-19 and its ongoing effects. 

Coronavirus image by Miroslava Chrienova from Pixabay
Coronavirus image by Miroslava Chrienova from Pixabay

This symposium, organised in conjunction with History & Policy, Institute of Historical Research will draw on historical research to explore the policy challenges that result from significant health and social crises and show how these were addressed in the past. The symposium seeks to move beyond the historical analysis of the ‘emergency’ phase of pandemics and assess their longer running legacies. 

The event consists of two half days of two sessions, tackling three papers in each session with a Q&A to close. The symposium will have two areas of focus:

  • The first centres on health, looking at the implementation of vaccination programmes in the past, and at how the history of other aspects of health and health services may determine the aftermath of COVID-19.
  • The second will examine the economic, social, and political impacts of past shocks, and also at how we can explain global differences in policy responses to COVID-19 by considering regional, national and local histories.

Programme Day 1 - 11 May 2021 

14.00 - 15.55: Session 1 - Vaccination

Chair

Hannah Elizabeth, LSHTM 

Speakers 

  • Gareth Millward, University of Warwick: ‘Confidence and Hesitancy: the Historical Construction of a "Problem"' 
  • Sanjoy Bhattacharya, University of York: ‘Is Vaccine Hesitancy Anti-Science?: A Review of Resistance in International and Global Health Programmes’ 
  • Dora Vargha, University of Exeter: ‘The End and What Comes After: Understanding Epidemic Temporalities’ 
16.15 - 18.00: Session 2 - Beyond the Pandemic – Mental and Emotional Health

Chair

Janet Weston, LSHTM 

Speakers

  • Matt Smith, University of Strathclyde: ‘Peace of Mind in Pandemic Times: Universal Basic Income’s Potential to Improve Mental Health’ 
  • Agnes Arnold-Forster, McGill University:  ‘The NHS Workforce and Emotional Health: Past, Present, and Future?’ 
  • Fred Cooper, University of Exeter: ‘Days of Abandonment: History, Language, and the Politics of the Lonely Pandemic’ 

 Programme Day 2 - 12 May 2021 

14.00 - 15.55: Session 3 - Global policy responses

Chair

Philip Murphy, Institute of Historical Research 

Speakers

  • Marcos Cueto & Gabriel Lopes, Casa de Oswaldo Cruz, Fiocruz, Rio de Janeiro: ‘“Mismanagement:" and "Necropolitics" in the first year of the Pandemic in Brazil’ 
  • Anne-Emanuelle Birn, University of Toronto: ‘Pandemic (history) fatigue: which/whose histories matter for global health policy players’  
  • Vivek Neelakantan, Independent Scholar: ‘Framing COVID-19 in India: A Case of Necropolitics and Trust Deficit’ 
16.15 - 18.00: Session 4 - Beyond the Pandemic – Economy and Society 

Chair

Virginia Berridge, LSHTM 

Speakers  

  • Jenny Crane, University of Oxford: ‘I Worry Every day That I am Going to get COVID-19 and Give it to my Mum': Changing Childhoods in the age of COVID-19’   
  • Christos Lynteris & Jules Skotnes-Brown, University of St Andrews: ‘Sylvatic COVID-19 Reservoirs? A Warning From History’ 
  • Simon Szreter and Hilary Cooper, University of Cambridge: 'Wanting: a Strategy for Preventing Community Transmission of Infection in the Austerity State' 

Recording links 

 


 

LSHTM's response to COVID-19

LSHTM experts are involved in many different aspects of COVID-19 research as well as providing guidance to those responding around the globe every day. Find out about our latest research, news, events and free online courses on the outbreak.

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Follow recording links. Free and open to all. No registration required.

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