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"Stay home": queer(y)-ing the heteronormative assumptions of COVID policy responses

In: Research Handbook on Public Management and COVID-19

Author

Listed:
  • Peter Matthews
  • Daniel Edmiston

Abstract

In early 2020, governments in many countries responded to uncontrolled community transmission of COVID-19 by instituting lockdowns, or shelter-in-place orders, of varying degrees of stringency. As we waited for the roll-out of vaccines to lower the mortality and morbidity of the viral infection, lockdowns were used repeatedly by governments across the world as a public policy measure to reduce transmission. In this chapter, we use the experiences of LGBT+ people during the COVID pandemic in the UK, as captured in research, to “queer” public management. Public policy, and its administration, routinely appeals to the circumstances, needs and preferences of the majority in designing services and distributing resources. There are all sorts of unintended and exclusionary consequences of this that preoccupy researchers interested in minoritized or marginalised populations. The public policy response to COVID-19 is of course no different. At times, this appeal to the majority has pivoted on a heteronormative understanding of what can and should constitute “home” and intimate relationships during times of public health crisis. At other times, a failure to recognise difference in the lives of all citizen-subjects has benefited LGBT+ people, but not sufficiently to fulfil their distinctive circumstances and needs. In this chapter, we demonstrate how policy responses to COVID-19 have tended to reflect a series of heteronormative assumptions that typically underlie public management, uniquely shaping the lives, security and opportunity of LGBT+ people.

Suggested Citation

  • Peter Matthews & Daniel Edmiston, 2024. ""Stay home": queer(y)-ing the heteronormative assumptions of COVID policy responses," Chapters, in: Helen Dickinson & Sophie Yates & Janine O’Flynn & Catherine Smith (ed.), Research Handbook on Public Management and COVID-19, chapter 23, pages 300-311, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:21210_23
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781802205954.00033
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