TY - JOUR
T1 - Negotiating risks and responsibilities during lockdown
T2 - ethical reasoning and affective experience in Aotearoa New Zealand
AU - Trnka, Susanna
AU - Long, Nicholas J.
AU - Aikman, Pounamu Jade
AU - Appleton, Nayantara Sheoran
AU - Davies, Sharyn Graham
AU - Deckert, Antje
AU - Fehoko, Edmond
AU - Holroyd, Eleanor
AU - Jivraj, Naseem
AU - Laws, Megan
AU - Martin-Anatias, Nelly
AU - Roguski, Michael
AU - Simpson, Nikita
AU - Sterling, Rogena
AU - Tunufa’i, Laumua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Over forty-nine days of Level 4 and Level 3 lockdown, residents of Aotearoa New Zealand were subject to ‘stay home’ regulations that restricted physical contact to members of the same social ‘bubble’. This article examines their moral decision-making and affective experiences of lockdown, especially when faced with competing responsibilities to adhere to public health regulations, but also to care for themselves or provide support to people outside their bubbles. Our respondents engaged in independent risk assessment, weighing up how best to uphold the ‘spirit’ of the lockdown even when contravening lockdown regulations; their decisions could, however, lead to acute social rifts. Some respondents–such as those in flatshares and shared childcare arrangements–recounted feeling disempowered from participating in the collective management of risk and responsibility within their bubbles, while essential workers found that anxieties about their workplace exposure to the coronavirus could prevent them from expanding their bubbles in ways they might have liked. The inability to adequately care for oneself or for others thus emerges as a crucial axis of disadvantage, specific to times of lockdown. Policy recommendations regarding lockdown regulations are provided.
AB - Over forty-nine days of Level 4 and Level 3 lockdown, residents of Aotearoa New Zealand were subject to ‘stay home’ regulations that restricted physical contact to members of the same social ‘bubble’. This article examines their moral decision-making and affective experiences of lockdown, especially when faced with competing responsibilities to adhere to public health regulations, but also to care for themselves or provide support to people outside their bubbles. Our respondents engaged in independent risk assessment, weighing up how best to uphold the ‘spirit’ of the lockdown even when contravening lockdown regulations; their decisions could, however, lead to acute social rifts. Some respondents–such as those in flatshares and shared childcare arrangements–recounted feeling disempowered from participating in the collective management of risk and responsibility within their bubbles, while essential workers found that anxieties about their workplace exposure to the coronavirus could prevent them from expanding their bubbles in ways they might have liked. The inability to adequately care for oneself or for others thus emerges as a crucial axis of disadvantage, specific to times of lockdown. Policy recommendations regarding lockdown regulations are provided.
KW - Aotearoa
KW - COVID-19
KW - New Zealand
KW - collective responsibility
KW - ethical reasoning
KW - lockdown
KW - moral experience
KW - pandemics
KW - risk
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099478357&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03036758.2020.1865417
DO - 10.1080/03036758.2020.1865417
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099478357
SN - 0303-6758
VL - 51
SP - S55-S74
JO - Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
JF - Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
IS - S1
ER -