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As the COVID-19 crisis began to take shape, all eyes were on Italy,
the first Western country to attempt a response to the deadly
pandemic. For institutional decision makers and average citizens
alike, it was a time of deep uncertainty. As scientists struggled
to understand the nature of the virus and how it spread, the
gradualness with which information became available caused only
deeper uncertainty, as did the inevitable disagreements over which
protective actions the government should put in place. Despite some
initial delay in its response, the Italian government eventually
implemented a nationwide lockdown, which helped control the spread
of the disease but simultaneously created unintended consequences
for vulnerable populations, like small business owners, women, the
elderly, and workers living paycheck to paycheck. Drawing on data
surveys conducted during the transition between the first lockdown
and staged reopening, this book examines people's risk perception
and their willingness to trust the sources and channels of
information that were available to them. It also looks at their
attitudes toward the protective behaviors they were asked to adopt
and the ways in which their own cultural worldviews impacted their
support for pandemic response policies. With remarkable depth and
candor, respondents reflected on what a post-COVID-19 Italy might
look like, filling out the book with the hopes and fears of real
people who had stared death in the face and lived to tell about it.
The book looks ahead to possibilities for future research, policy,
and practice. COVID-19 in Italy elaborates and tests several
aspects of the Protective Action Decision Model (PADM) in the
Italian context, introducing the concept of ontological security
and insecurity as an explanatory change factor to help interpret
the Italian experience of responding to COVID-19.
This volume presents a new perspective for discussing the European
social contract and its main challenges, bringing together
single-nation and comparative studies from across Europe.
Presenting both theoretical discussions and empirical case studies,
it explores various aspects of social cohesion, including social
protection, the labour market, social movements, healthcare, social
inequalities and poverty. With particular attention to the effects
of the international economic and financial crisis on social
cohesion, particularly in the light of the implementation of
so-called 'austerity measures', authors engage with questions
surrounding the possible fragmentation of the European model of
social cohesion and the transformation of forms of social
protection, asking whether social cohesion continues to represent -
if it ever did - a common feature of European countries. Breaking
new ground in understanding the future of Social Europe and its
main dynamics of change, The European Social Model Adrift will
appeal to scholars of sociology, social policy and politics, with
interests in social cohesion, the effects of financial crisis and
the European social model.
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