Envisioning the new normal in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic: Inequality, COVID-19 and vulnerability
Envisioning the new normal in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic: Inequality, COVID-19 and vulnerability
Date
2021
Authors
Dharmendra Bahadur, Dhami
Huang, Zhouzheng
Awkit, Graciela Ann
Santayakul, Sirikanya
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Global Campus Human Rights
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has adversely affected millions
of people across the globe. The pandemic inarguably impacted the
social and economic lives of all people, especially in vulnerable and
minority groups. This research aimed to identify the pre-pandemic
discourse of normalcy among vulnerable and minority groups, and a
split in the discourse of the ‘new normal’ which lessens the likelihood
that a new-normal regime will emerge to enhance the resilience of these
groups in future crises. The research includes cases of vulnerable and
minority groups from four Asian countries: orphans in Thailand, Dalits
in Nepal, Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) in the Philippines, and
elderly people in China. Orphan children in Thailand experienced
devastating consequences from the pandemic, being deprived of
education, government assistance, medical care and vaccination. Dalits
in Nepal are the victims of age-old caste-based discrimination, and
they were further discriminated against by pandemic relief distribution
and recovery programs and in quarantines. They were excluded from
government remedies, denied admission to hospitals, and expelled from
work places. Some starved to death due to financial and food crises, and their children were deprived of basic rights including education. In
the Philippines, the pandemic had an appalling impact on OFWs and
their families, exacerbating non-payment of wages, wage theft and
discrimination. Government job preservation guidelines weren’t effective
for OFWs, especially for undocumented migrant workers. Finally, in
China, elderly people were one of the vulnerable groups most impacted
by the pandemic. They faced declines in service quality and mental
health, and a shortage of professional staff in nursing homes. Their
lack of digital literacy excluded them from pandemic monitoring, online
medical care and contactless government services. Through these four
cases, the research identifies gaps in the pandemic response and remedies
of the states for the vulnerable and minority groups. The paper proposes
that, instead of a model treating these health crises, economic crises and
social crises as consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, they should
be treated as separate issues for specific minority and vulnerable groups
to allow appropriate responses to the pandemic-induced challenges that
they experience.
Description
Keywords
COVID-19 pandemic,
Asia,
inequality,
minorities,
vulnerable groups,
social rights,
economic rights,
Thailand,
Nepal,
Philippines,
China
Citation
Dharmendra Bahadur Dhami, Zhouzheng Huang, Graciela Ann Awkit and Sirikanya Santayakul.
“Envisioning the new normal in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic: Inequality, COVID-19 and
vulnerability.” (2001) 5 Global Campus Human Rights Journal 111-128
http://dx.doi.org/10.25330/1356