<p> 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’. </p>
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/10.1177/13691481241284362
Author affiliation
College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/Criminology, Sociology & Social Policy/History, Politics & Int'l Relations
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
British Journal of Politics and International Relations