| Título : |
COVID-19 and Similar Futures : Pandemic Geographies |
| Tipo de documento: |
documento electrónico |
| Autores: |
Andrews, Gavin J., ; Crooks, Valorie A., ; Pearce, Jamie R., ; Messina, Jane P., |
| Mención de edición: |
1 ed. |
| Editorial: |
[s.l.] : Springer |
| Fecha de publicación: |
2021 |
| Número de páginas: |
XIV, 448 p. 27 ilustraciones, 22 ilustraciones en color. |
| ISBN/ISSN/DL: |
978-3-030-70179-6 |
| Nota general: |
Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos. |
| Palabras clave: |
Geografía Geografía ambiental Epidemiología Salud pública Inmunología Virología Geografía integrada |
| Índice Dewey: |
910 Geografía viajes |
| Resumen: |
Este volumen proporciona una respuesta crítica a la pandemia de COVID-19, mostrando toda la gama de cuestiones y perspectivas que la disciplina de la geografía puede exponer y poner sobre la mesa, no sólo para este evento específico, sino para otros similares que podrían ocurrir en el futuro. . Compuesta por casi 60 capítulos breves (2500 palabras) fáciles de leer, la colección proporciona numerosos puntos de entrada teóricos, empíricos y metodológicos para comprender las formas en que el espacio, el lugar y otros fenómenos geográficos están implicados en la crisis. Aunque pertenece a una serie de libros de geografía de la salud, el libro explora la centralidad y la importancia de una gama completa de geografías biológicas, materiales, sociales, culturales, económicas, urbanas, rurales y otras. Por lo tanto, el libro une campos de estudio y subdisciplinas que a menudo se consideran mundos separados, lo que demuestra el potencial para una futura colaboración e investigación interdisciplinaria. De hecho, el libro articula un enfoque geográfico diverso pero, en última instancia, completo y multiescalar para el principal desafío de salud de nuestro tiempo, reuniendo diferentes tipos de estudios con un propósito común. El público objetivo abarca desde estudiantes universitarios de último año y estudiantes de posgrado hasta académicos profesionales en geografía y una serie de disciplinas relacionadas. Estos académicos podrían estar interesados en la COVID-19 específicamente o en el amplio enfoque disciplinario del libro sobre las enfermedades infecciosas en general. El libro también será útil para los responsables de la formulación de políticas en diversos niveles a la hora de formular respuestas, y para los lectores en general interesados en aprender sobre la crisis de la COVID-19. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Spatial Epidemiology: Challenges and Methods in COVID-19 Research -- Chapter 3. Disease Ecology -- Chapter 4. COVID-19 and the Political Ecology of Global Food and Health Systems -- Chapter 5. Setting a Death Trap: International Political Economy, COVID-19 Responses, and the Plight of Central American Migrants -- Chapter 6. Emergent Global Pandemic Risks, Complex Systems, and Population Health -- Chapter 7. Eight Centuries of Epidemic and Pandemic Control -- Chapter 8. Humanism and Social Constructionism -- Chapter 9. Mapping the Post-Structural Geographies of COVID-19 -- Chapter 10. Non-Representational Approaches to COVID-19 -- Chapter 11. How to Have Theory in a Pandemic: A Critical Reflection on the Discourses of COVID-19 -- Chapter 12. Health Service Capacities, Responses, and Practice -- Chapter 13. Informal Care: The Forgotten Frontlines of COVID-19 -- Chapter 14. Resilience, Risk, and Policymaking -- Chapter 15. Managing Internationally Mobile Bodies in a World on Hold: Migration, Tourism, and Biological Citizenship in the Context of COVID-19 -- Chapter 16. Mobility is Dead: Post-pandemic Planning as an Opportunity to Prioritize Sustainability and Accessibility -- Chapter 17. Media and Information in Times of Crisis: The Case of the COVID-19 Infodemic -- Chapter 18. The (Social Distanced) Circle of Family, Friends, and Allies: How COVID-19 is Re-shaping Social Capital and New Opportunities for Research -- Chapter 19. The Syndemic Pandemic: COVID-19 and Social Inequality -- Chapter 20. Maintaining Wellbeing During and After COVID-19 -- Chapter 21. Pandemic Geographies of Physical Activity -- Chapter 22. Surveillance, Control, and Containment (Biopolitics) -- Chapter 23. Contradictory and Compounding: The Social Implications of COVID-19 -- Chapter 24. Geographical Metaphors in Everyday Life -- Chapter 25. Vaccine Geopolitics During COVID-19: How Pandemics Thicken Borders, Exacerbate Violence, and Deepen Existing Fault Lines -- Chapter 26.Geographies of Digital Storytelling: Care and Harm in a Pandemic -- Chapter 27. Animal Geographies in a Pandemic -- Chapter 28. Environment and COVID-19: Unpacking the Links -- Chapter 29. Home in the Context of COVID-19 -- Chapter 30. Death, Devastation, and Failure in Long-term care: The Need for a Geographical Re-engagement with the Sector -- Chapter 31. Re-figuring Public Spaces? -- Chapter 32. Consumer Spaces -- Chapter 33. The Place, Labour, and Networks of Transportation during COVID-19 -- Chapter 34. COVID-19: Pandemic on an Urban Planet -- Chapter 35. Geographies of the Rural and the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Chapter 36. Global Spaces: COVID-19 and the Reconfiguring of Global Health -- Chapter 37. Why Green and Blue Spaces Matter More than Ever -- Chapter 38. COVID-19 in the Developing World: Curse or Blessing? -- Chapter 39. Art Spaces -- Chapter 40. Practicing Self-determination to Protect Indigenous Health in COVID-19: Lessons for this Pandemic and Similar Futures -- Chapter 41. #thenewnormaland the Pathological: Rethinking Human-Virus Relations during the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Chapter 42. Older People -- Chapter 43. Children and Families -- Chapter 44. Race, Ethnicity, and COVID-19: The Persistence of Black-White Disparities in the United States -- Chapter 45. Understanding the Importance of Gender for COVID-19 -- Chapter 46. People with Disabilities -- Chapter 47. Participatory Research by/for the Precariously Housed in a time of COVID-19 -- Chapter 48. Mental-ill Health and Anxious Pandemic Geographies -- Chapter 49. COVID-19 and Health Professionals: Recommitting to a Global Health Agenda -- Chapter 50. Labor Geography, Racial Capitalism, and the Pandemic Portal -- Chapter 51. Geographies of (Domestic) Alcohol Consumption -- Chapter 52. Public Geographies in a Post-COVID-19 World -- Chapter 53. Textures of an Epidemic: On the Necessity of Qualitative Methods in Making Better Pandemic Futures -- Chapter 54. Counting COVID: quantitative geographical approaches to COVID-19 -- Chapter 55.GIS and Spatial Representations: Challenges and Missteps -- Chapter 56. New Forms of Data, New Forms of Opportunities to Monitor and Tackle a Pandemic -- Chapter 57. Knowledge Translation and COVID-19 -- Chapter 58. Examining Geographical Visualizations of COVID-19. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
COVID-19 and Similar Futures : Pandemic Geographies [documento electrónico] / Andrews, Gavin J., ; Crooks, Valorie A., ; Pearce, Jamie R., ; Messina, Jane P., . - 1 ed. . - [s.l.] : Springer, 2021 . - XIV, 448 p. 27 ilustraciones, 22 ilustraciones en color. ISBN : 978-3-030-70179-6 Libro disponible en la plataforma SpringerLink. Descarga y lectura en formatos PDF, HTML y ePub. Descarga completa o por capítulos.
| Palabras clave: |
Geografía Geografía ambiental Epidemiología Salud pública Inmunología Virología Geografía integrada |
| Índice Dewey: |
910 Geografía viajes |
| Resumen: |
Este volumen proporciona una respuesta crítica a la pandemia de COVID-19, mostrando toda la gama de cuestiones y perspectivas que la disciplina de la geografía puede exponer y poner sobre la mesa, no sólo para este evento específico, sino para otros similares que podrían ocurrir en el futuro. . Compuesta por casi 60 capítulos breves (2500 palabras) fáciles de leer, la colección proporciona numerosos puntos de entrada teóricos, empíricos y metodológicos para comprender las formas en que el espacio, el lugar y otros fenómenos geográficos están implicados en la crisis. Aunque pertenece a una serie de libros de geografía de la salud, el libro explora la centralidad y la importancia de una gama completa de geografías biológicas, materiales, sociales, culturales, económicas, urbanas, rurales y otras. Por lo tanto, el libro une campos de estudio y subdisciplinas que a menudo se consideran mundos separados, lo que demuestra el potencial para una futura colaboración e investigación interdisciplinaria. De hecho, el libro articula un enfoque geográfico diverso pero, en última instancia, completo y multiescalar para el principal desafío de salud de nuestro tiempo, reuniendo diferentes tipos de estudios con un propósito común. El público objetivo abarca desde estudiantes universitarios de último año y estudiantes de posgrado hasta académicos profesionales en geografía y una serie de disciplinas relacionadas. Estos académicos podrían estar interesados en la COVID-19 específicamente o en el amplio enfoque disciplinario del libro sobre las enfermedades infecciosas en general. El libro también será útil para los responsables de la formulación de políticas en diversos niveles a la hora de formular respuestas, y para los lectores en general interesados en aprender sobre la crisis de la COVID-19. |
| Nota de contenido: |
Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. Spatial Epidemiology: Challenges and Methods in COVID-19 Research -- Chapter 3. Disease Ecology -- Chapter 4. COVID-19 and the Political Ecology of Global Food and Health Systems -- Chapter 5. Setting a Death Trap: International Political Economy, COVID-19 Responses, and the Plight of Central American Migrants -- Chapter 6. Emergent Global Pandemic Risks, Complex Systems, and Population Health -- Chapter 7. Eight Centuries of Epidemic and Pandemic Control -- Chapter 8. Humanism and Social Constructionism -- Chapter 9. Mapping the Post-Structural Geographies of COVID-19 -- Chapter 10. Non-Representational Approaches to COVID-19 -- Chapter 11. How to Have Theory in a Pandemic: A Critical Reflection on the Discourses of COVID-19 -- Chapter 12. Health Service Capacities, Responses, and Practice -- Chapter 13. Informal Care: The Forgotten Frontlines of COVID-19 -- Chapter 14. Resilience, Risk, and Policymaking -- Chapter 15. Managing Internationally Mobile Bodies in a World on Hold: Migration, Tourism, and Biological Citizenship in the Context of COVID-19 -- Chapter 16. Mobility is Dead: Post-pandemic Planning as an Opportunity to Prioritize Sustainability and Accessibility -- Chapter 17. Media and Information in Times of Crisis: The Case of the COVID-19 Infodemic -- Chapter 18. The (Social Distanced) Circle of Family, Friends, and Allies: How COVID-19 is Re-shaping Social Capital and New Opportunities for Research -- Chapter 19. The Syndemic Pandemic: COVID-19 and Social Inequality -- Chapter 20. Maintaining Wellbeing During and After COVID-19 -- Chapter 21. Pandemic Geographies of Physical Activity -- Chapter 22. Surveillance, Control, and Containment (Biopolitics) -- Chapter 23. Contradictory and Compounding: The Social Implications of COVID-19 -- Chapter 24. Geographical Metaphors in Everyday Life -- Chapter 25. Vaccine Geopolitics During COVID-19: How Pandemics Thicken Borders, Exacerbate Violence, and Deepen Existing Fault Lines -- Chapter 26.Geographies of Digital Storytelling: Care and Harm in a Pandemic -- Chapter 27. Animal Geographies in a Pandemic -- Chapter 28. Environment and COVID-19: Unpacking the Links -- Chapter 29. Home in the Context of COVID-19 -- Chapter 30. Death, Devastation, and Failure in Long-term care: The Need for a Geographical Re-engagement with the Sector -- Chapter 31. Re-figuring Public Spaces? -- Chapter 32. Consumer Spaces -- Chapter 33. The Place, Labour, and Networks of Transportation during COVID-19 -- Chapter 34. COVID-19: Pandemic on an Urban Planet -- Chapter 35. Geographies of the Rural and the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Chapter 36. Global Spaces: COVID-19 and the Reconfiguring of Global Health -- Chapter 37. Why Green and Blue Spaces Matter More than Ever -- Chapter 38. COVID-19 in the Developing World: Curse or Blessing? -- Chapter 39. Art Spaces -- Chapter 40. Practicing Self-determination to Protect Indigenous Health in COVID-19: Lessons for this Pandemic and Similar Futures -- Chapter 41. #thenewnormaland the Pathological: Rethinking Human-Virus Relations during the COVID-19 Pandemic -- Chapter 42. Older People -- Chapter 43. Children and Families -- Chapter 44. Race, Ethnicity, and COVID-19: The Persistence of Black-White Disparities in the United States -- Chapter 45. Understanding the Importance of Gender for COVID-19 -- Chapter 46. People with Disabilities -- Chapter 47. Participatory Research by/for the Precariously Housed in a time of COVID-19 -- Chapter 48. Mental-ill Health and Anxious Pandemic Geographies -- Chapter 49. COVID-19 and Health Professionals: Recommitting to a Global Health Agenda -- Chapter 50. Labor Geography, Racial Capitalism, and the Pandemic Portal -- Chapter 51. Geographies of (Domestic) Alcohol Consumption -- Chapter 52. Public Geographies in a Post-COVID-19 World -- Chapter 53. Textures of an Epidemic: On the Necessity of Qualitative Methods in Making Better Pandemic Futures -- Chapter 54. Counting COVID: quantitative geographical approaches to COVID-19 -- Chapter 55.GIS and Spatial Representations: Challenges and Missteps -- Chapter 56. New Forms of Data, New Forms of Opportunities to Monitor and Tackle a Pandemic -- Chapter 57. Knowledge Translation and COVID-19 -- Chapter 58. Examining Geographical Visualizations of COVID-19. |
| En línea: |
https://link-springer-com.biblioproxy.umanizales.edu.co/referencework/10.1007/97 [...] |
| Link: |
https://biblioteca.umanizales.edu.co/ils/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&i |
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