What research from conflict-affected countries can tell us about responses to Covid-19

What research from conflict-affected countries can tell us about responses to Covid-19

Covid-19 has given me a new perspective on ten years of research with the Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium (SLRC). Insights from conflict-affected contexts can shed light on some current challenges in western countries affected by coronavirus.

Europeans are incredibly lucky to largely not know what it feels like to fear for their lives due to war and violence. Yet suddenly, communities in Europe share characteristics with people who live in countries with violent conflict: coronavirus makes lives precarious and incomes unstable. It shows what it’s like when public services are underfunded, unreliable and insufficient.

Read here the three insights, based upon how people respond in conflict contexts, that can also teach us about public reactions to Covid-19.

 

This blog first appeared on the ODI site. 

Author: Mareike Schomerus, ODI

Image courtesy of Cityswift via Flickr.

The views are those of the author and not necessarily those of ETTG.

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