Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/115896
Title: From Uncertainty to Trust: COVID-19 Pandemic Responses of South Korea and Sweden
Authors: Rezaev, A. V.
Tregubova, N. D.
Ivanova, A. A.
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Уральский федеральный университет
Ural Federal University
Citation: Rezaev A. V. From Uncertainty to Trust: COVID-19 Pandemic Responses of South Korea and Sweden / A. V. Rezaev, N. D. Tregubova, A. A. Ivanova // Changing Societies & Personalities. — 2022. — Vol. 6. Iss. 1. — P. 79–97.
Abstract: Epidemiological situations, such as the pandemic of COVID-19, pose a clear and significant problem for the states in their efforts to construct and to control their population. The widespread introduction of a lockdown as a regulatory method during the current pandemic could be associated with the need to preserve an understandable, quantifiable, and predictable management object. This paper considers, analyses, and compares two deviant cases of COVID-19 pandemic responses: South Korea and Sweden. In South Korea, the pandemic regulations were dominated by large-scale testing and contact tracing, while lockdown policies have played a supplementary role. Sweden’s attempt to develop population immunity by introducing less stringent measures that its neighbours has attracted much attention worldwide. The authors conduct desk research and analyse secondary data on pandemic regulations and their effects in these two countries in 2020. Similarities and differences between Swedish and South Korean cases are formulated regarding trust inside and between the states.
Keywords: TRUST
MODERN STATE
COVID-19
PANDEMIC REGULATIONS
HEALTHCARE IN SWEDEN
HEALTHCARE IN SOUTH KOREA
DEMOCRATIZATION OF EXPERTISE
URI: http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/115896
RSCI ID: https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=48747617
ISSN: 2587-8964
2587-6104
DOI: 10.15826/csp.2022.6.1.164
metadata.dc.description.sponsorship: The research was supported by the grant of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (project No. 20-04-60033).
Origin: Changing Societies & Personalities. 2022. Vol. 6. Iss. 1
Appears in Collections:Changing Societies & Personalities

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