Brazil’s war on COVID-19: Crisis, not conflict—Doctors, not generals
BRAZIL’S WAR ON COVID-19: CRISIS, NOT CONFLICT—DOCTORS, NOT GENERALS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5216/bgg.v40i01.64813Abstract
This commentary first documents the ways in which President Jair Bolsonaro’s administration has evoked securitized discursive strategies that frame Brazil’s national response to COVID-19 as a matter of defense instead of public health. We then ask: What does it mean to talk about the virus and the ways to address it through war-framings? We argue that the Bolsonaro administration has framed the COVID-19 pandemic as an extra-territorial threat in an effort to create internal stability while failing to handle the matter effectively. Such politically motivated spatial framings inhibit an effective response in Brazil and pose a severe threat to public health. Once COVID-19 becomes securitized, the response is framed by the military bureaucracy rather than public health authorities, resulting in dangerous consequences.
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