Post-pandemic transformations: How and why COVID-19 requires us to re‐ think development
Autor
Leach, Melissa
MacGregor, Hayley
Scoones, Ian
Wilkinson, Annie
Institución
Resumen
COVID-19 is proving to be the long awaited ‘big one’: a pandemic capable of bringing societies and
economies to their knees. There is an urgent need to examine how COVID-19 – as a health and
development crisis - unfolded the way it did it and to consider possibilities for post-pandemic
transformations and for rethinking development more broadly. Drawing on over a decade of
research on epidemics, we argue that the origins, unfolding and effects of the COVID-19 pandemic
require analysis that addresses both structural political-economic conditions alongside far less
ordered, ‘unruly’ processes reflecting complexity, uncertainty, contingency and context-specificity.
This structural-unruly duality in the conditions and processes of pandemic emergence, progression and impact provides a lens to view three key challenges areas. The first is how scientific advice and
evidence are used in policy, when conditions are rigidly ‘locked in’ to established power relations
and yet so uncertain. Second is how economies function, with the COVID-19 crisis having revealed
the limits of a conventional model of economic growth. The third concerns how new forms of
politics can become the basis of reshaped citizen-state relations in confronting a pandemic, such as
those around mutual solidarity and care. COVID-19 demonstrates that we face an uncertain future,
where anticipation of and resilience to major shocks must become the core problematic of
development studies and practice. Where mainstream approaches to development have been top
down, rigid and orientated towards narrowly-defined economic goals, post-COVID-19 development
must have a radically transformative, egalitarian and inclusive knowledge and politics at its core.