Sweden’s Pandemic Experiment

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This book considers Sweden’s pandemic management which differed so significantly from much of the rest of the world: it provoked intense and wide-reaching interest, curiosity and criticism. Trans-disciplinary Swedish authors from the humanities, life sciences, social sciences, and cultural studiesuse a variety of tools to mine deeper into some of the central elements and dimensions in their country’s pandemic management such as understandings of freedom, the execution of power, denialism, exceptionalism, patriotism, the role of expertise and trust in the national state to give a deeper understanding of Sweden’s decisions, failures, successes, and the lessons to be learned.

Aimed at readers with interest in global health and politics it will also be of interest in disciplines such as virology,epidemiology, history, cultural studies, ethics, media studies, medicine and economics.

The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

Author(s): Sigurd Bergmann, Martin Lindström
Series: The Politics of Pandemics
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 331
City: London

Cover
Endorsement
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Sweden stumbles along the Third Way
1 In the rupture between this and another world to come: introductory remarks on pandemic emergency and Sweden’s response
2 A timeline of events: December 2019 to February 2022
3 On the virology of SARS-CoV-2 and an expert authority without real experts: was there a deliberate disinformation from the Public Health Agency of Sweden on the SARS-CoV-2 infection’s spread in the population?
4 The Covid-19 pandemic and the Swedish strategy: central aspects of the strategy in relation to evidence and evidence-based medicine criteria
5 The Swedish Covid-19 response: from poorly judged utilitarianism to history revisionism and the tragedy of the commons
6 Learning from failure: mastering a pandemic in the triad of science, politics and trust
7 Epidemiology and Covid-19: why numbers are important and can be misleading
8 The political economy of estimating immunity levels
9 Children at the front line of the Covid-19 pandemic
10 The biopolitics of herd immunity
11 Collaborators, supporters, and science judges: how trust in the Public Health Agency’s messaging was achieved
12 Sweden unmasked: reading state and society through the pandemic
13 A drastic end to a long story of success in Swedish preventive medicine
Index