4.1 Article

Amplified injustices and mutual aid in the COVID-19 pandemic

Journal

QUALITATIVE SOCIAL WORK
Volume 20, Issue 1-2, Pages 410-415

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1473325020973326

Keywords

Carers; community work; disasters; environmental social work; resilience; uncertainty

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The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted existing injustices in the United States, as seen in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Mutual aid networks have provided people's basic needs during crises and worked towards radical change, offering social workers an opportunity to re-examine their relationship to helping. Lessons learned from these experiences can be applied to future crises, including the looming climate crisis.
The COVID-19 pandemic has amplified existing injustices in the United States, which is exemplified in Ypsilanti, Michigan. However, the pandemic also provides an opportunity to re-imagine existing ways of being in the world, and mutual aid networks that have provided for people's basic needs during multiple crises while also working towards more radical change provide an opportunity for social workers to examine their relationship to helping. The author uses their personal experience with a local mutual aid network to examine the power and possibility of mutual aid, particularly in times of crisis, as well as sources of social work resistance to decentralized and non-professional forms of helping and caring. These lessons are carried beyond the COVID-19 pandemic to their consequences for the looming climate crisis.

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