@article{Duncan_Höglund_2021, title={Decolonising the COVID-19 pandemic: On being in this together}, volume={11}, url={https://journal.fi/ar/article/view/107743}, DOI={10.30664/ar.107743}, abstractNote={<p class="p1">At <span class="s1">its inception,</span> the COVID-19 <span class="s1">pandemic was</span> described as something inherently new, capable of crossing and erasing the economic, racial, gendered, and religious divides that stratify societies around the world. However, the <span class="s1">ongoing pandemic</span> is not new or egalitarian, but fuelled by, and fuelling, crises already <span class="s1">under way</span> on a global scale. In this article we examine <span class="s1">on the one hand</span> <span class="s1">the relationship </span>between the pandemic and still-active formations of racialised and gendered power, and on the other <span class="s1">the pandemic’s</span> inextricability from a dispersed and uneven planetary emergency. As the environmental historian Jason W. Moore notes, this emergency disproportionately affects ‘women, people of colour and (neo)colonial populations’ (2019: 54), and the effects of COVID-19 are similarly unevenly allocated.</p>}, number={2}, journal={Approaching Religion}, author={Duncan, Rebecca and Höglund, Johan}, year={2021}, month={Nov.}, pages={115–131} }