DAYSON, Christopher and DAMM, Christopher (2020). Re-making state-civil society relationships during the COVID 19 pandemic? An English perspective. People, Place and Policy Online, 14 (3), 282-289. [Article]
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re-making-state-civil-society-COVID19-pandemic.pdf - Published Version
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re-making-state-civil-society-COVID19-pandemic.pdf - Published Version
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Abstract
State and civil society have had a complicated and inter-twined relationship for many
years and this has arguably never been more evident than during the COVID 19
pandemic. This review article discusses how this relationship played out locally and
nationally during the early months of the pandemic from an English perspective to
consider whether we have witnessed an extension of pre-existing roles or a re-making of
new ones. At a national level we identify the exacerbation of pre-existing adversarial
relationships focussed on the scale and necessity of the government’s financial support
package for civil society organisations (CSOs). At the local level we observe an extension
of prior complementary relationships, with CSOs further embedded in local systems of
decision making, co-ordination and service provision. Wealso identifya newly visible and
increasingly complementary local role for previously supplementary community-led CSOs
responding to the needs of vulnerable citizens. It is unclear if the next phase of the
pandemic will affect these relationships yet further, or whether these configurationswill
be preserved following the COVID-19 crisis, but it seems certain that the crisis will have
a lasting effect on national and local state-civil society interactions in one way or another
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