Stay safe, stay home? Majority world children, the COVID-19 pandemic, and (everyday) security politics
This article explores children in the majority world’s experiences of the stringent health security practices implemented in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing on original empirical research in five majority world countries, it examines children’s own accounts of their experiences of lockdowns and stay-at-home orders. Our analysis of the children’s narratives draws out the spatial, temporal, and affective dimensions of home-making under stay-at-home orders. In turn, we highlight complex and ambivalent connections between the notable and the mundane, between security and the everyday, and between home-making and world-building, and offer conclusions informed by majority world children on the ‘(important) banality of security and security politics’.
Funding
Leicester Institute for Advanced Studies
Global Challenges Research Fund
History
Citation
Staples, K., O’Reilly, M., Hassan, S., & Vostanis, P. (2024). Stay safe, stay home? Majority world children, the COVID-19 pandemic, and (everyday) security politics. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/13691481241284362Author affiliation
College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/Criminology, Sociology & Social Policy/History, Politics & Int'l RelationsVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
British Journal of Politics and International RelationsPublisher
SAGE Publicationsissn
1369-1481eissn
1467-856XCopyright date
2024Available date
2024-10-15Publisher DOI
Language
enDeposited by
Dr Kelly StaplesDeposit date
2024-10-08Rights Retention Statement
- No