From the bushfires to coronavirus, our old normal is gone forever. So whats next?

    Research output: Contribution to specialist publicationArticle

    Abstract

    The world faces profound disruption. For Australians who lived through the most horrific fire season on record, there has been no time to recover. The next crisis is now upon us in the form of COVID-19. As we grapple with uncertainty and upheaval, its clear that our old normal will never be recovered. Radical changes like these can be interpreted through the lens of rupture. As the social scientist Christian Lund describes, ruptures are open moments, when opportunities and risks multiply when new structural scaffolding is erected. The concept of rupture therefore explains what happens during periods of profound change such as colonisation or environmental catastrophe when relationships between people, governments and the environment get reconfigured. This can help us to make sense of the bushfire crisis and COVID-19: we are in an open moment, when the status quo is in flux.
    Original languageEnglish
    Specialist publicationThe Conversation
    Publication statusPublished - 2020

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