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The Unequal Pandemic

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Rated as a top 10 book about the COVID-19 pandemic by New Statesman: https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2021/07/best-books-about-covid-19-pandemic EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-...
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  • 15 June 2021
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Rated as a top 10 book about the COVID-19 pandemic by New Statesman: https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2021/07/best-books-about-covid-19-pandemic

EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC- ND

It has been claimed that we are ‘all in it together’ and that the COVID-19 virus ‘does not discriminate’.

This accessible, yet authoritative book dispels this myth of COVID-19 as an ‘equal opportunity’ disease, by showing how the pandemic is a syndemic of disease and inequality.

Drawing on international data and accounts, it argues that the pandemic is unequal in three ways: it has killed unequally, been experienced unequally and will impoverish unequally.

These inequalities are a political choice: with governments effectively choosing who lives and who dies, we need to learn from COVID-19 quickly to prevent growing inequality and to reduce health inequalities in the future.

COVID-19 is an unequal pandemic.

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Price: $14.95
Pages: 198
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 15 June 2021
ISBN: 9781447361237
Format: Paperback
BISACs: MEDICAL / Health Policy, Social discrimination and social justice, MEDICAL / Public Health, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Disease & Health Issues, Economic and financial crises and disasters, Public health and preventive medicine
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Clare Bambra is Professor of Public Health, Population Health Sciences Institute at Newcastle University.

Katherine Smith is Professor of Public Health Policy at University of Strathclyde.

Julia Lynch is Professor of Political Science at University of Pennsylvania.

Foreword - Kate Pickett

1. Introduction: Perfect Storm

2. Pale Rider: Pandemic Inequalities

3. Collateral Damage: Inequalities in the Lockdown

4. Pandemic Precarity: Inequalities in the Economic Crisis

5. Pandemic Politics: Inequality through Public Policy

6. Conclusion: Health and Inequality Beyond COVID-19