posted on 2024-09-05, 21:02authored byPhilip Proudfoot, Brigitte Rohwerder
This article explores the ways in which anti-migrant and refugee discourses and policies have flourished throughout the Covid-19 pandemic despite dominant global public health concerns, especially around vaccines. Our argument is that pre-crisis authoritarian, populist, and nativist political tendencies have proven remarkably resilient, interacting readily with the pandemic to further justify a rolling back on refugee and migrant rights. These tendencies risk, in several contexts, undermining the comprehensive global vaccination effort needed to combat the pandemic.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Institute of Development Studies
Citation
Proudfoot, P. and Rohwerder, B. (2022) ‘Anti-Migrant Authoritarian Populism and the Global Vaccination Challenge’ in Allouche, J. and te Lintelo, D.J.H. (Eds) Humanitarianism and Covid-19: Structural Dilemmas, Fault Lines, and New Perspectives, IDS Bulletin 53.2, Brighton: IDS