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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
The past 30 years have seen risk become a major field of study, most recently with the COVID-19 pandemic positioning it at the centre of public awareness, yet there is limited understanding of how risk can and should be used in policy making.
This book provides an accessible guide to the key elements of risk in policy making, including its role in rhetoric to legitimise decisions and choices.
Using risk as a framework, it examines how policy makers in a range of countries responded to the COVID-19 pandemic and explains why some were more successful than others.
Contents:
Foreword: Jens Zinn
Preface
1. Introduction: Risk as a Key Feature of Late Modern Societies
Part 1: Responding to the Challenges of the Pandemic
2. Managing Uncertainty: Framing COVID-19
3. The Risks of COVID-19: Probability, Categorisation and Outcomes
4. Communicating Risk: Public Health Messaging
Part 2: Mitigating Risk Through Science and Technology
5. 'Following the Science': Expertise and Risk
6. Risk Work To Maintain Services During the Pandemic
Part 3: Risk Narratives
7. Pandemic Narratives: Telling Stories About COVID-19 and Its Risks
8. Contesting Risk: Conspiracy Theories
9. Hindsight: Inquiries and the Blame Game
Part 4: Reflections on the Pandemic and Risk
10. Conclusion: Risk and the Pandemic
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Policy Press
Publication date: May, 2023
Pages: 192
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Public Health