Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has reconfigured personal, organisational and political landscapes in quite radical ways. This paper reflects on the differentiated impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and responses to it. We unpack some of the effects of the crisis on populations already subject to harassment, persecution and deprivation due to their marginal position in society or their resistance to state power. We illuminate how the current crisis is much more than a health crisis; the ways it exacerbates already existing deprivations; and how it might reveal hitherto unrecognised opportunities through which to make the world a more, rather than less, just and equitable place. Focus is on the way the crisis calls forth amplified forms of repression and consonantly amplified forms of vulnerability as well as reconfigured spaces for the operation of civil society organisations. We forward one key proposition, namely that while securitised responses to the crisis reveal an inherent conservatism, civil society responses reveal an agility and a capacity to innovate. While the inherent conservatism of securitised responses gives cause for serious concern, there is some hope to be found in the potential for innovation of civil society organisations. The revelation of humankind's shared vulnerability that is a feature of the crisis may serve as a springboard for the propagation of progressive change if we keep in mind the fundamentally human, and thus relational, nature of human rights and anti-torture work.

Highlights

  • The spread of COVID-19 in early 2020 shocked the world

  • In the immediate COVID-19 situation there was a fear that police violence and genderbased violence (GBV) would increase in South Africa and Kenya

  • In the Philippines the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology (BJMP) has been keen to engage with us (Balay and DIGNITY) both on the implementation of planned project activities as well as new COVID19 related activities. They have engaged in the pre-planned joint development of a psycho-educational training manual for psychologists and other relevant staff on providing psycho-social support to prisoners, and in addition have invited DIGNITY to deliver a webinar on the prevention of COVID-19 in jails

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Summary

Introduction

The spread of COVID-19 in early 2020 shocked the world. Unlike Ebola (between 2014 and 2016), which, while fiercer and more deadly, was relatively contained, Andrew M. Both The Guardian (McCool 2020) and Human Rights Watch (Ghoshal 2020) report on violence meted out to members of the LGBTIQ+ community gathered in a homeless shelter in Uganda, where the pretext for their arrest and maltreatment is COVID-19-related restrictions but where the real reason is more likely rooted in pre-existing prejudicial and homophobic policies and policing practices.

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