I am keeping the Question for discussion, What is the role of Geography in the study of COVID-1 pandamic?
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Answer:
Dallas Rogers and twenty‐two colleagues reflect on an international podcast project in which urban scholars from around the world provided audio recordings about their cities while measures limiting the spread of COVID‐19 were in effect. They reflect on the potential and limitations of podcasting as a digital research methodology.
Markus Hesse and Michael Rafferty employ the concept of relational cities to study the impact on and responses of Dublin and Luxembourg City to the COVID‐19 outbreak. They argue that the pandemic challenges the ‘business model’ of both cities but is unlikely to provoke a structural rethinking of their ‘relational urbanisations’.
Patrick Adler, Richard Florida and Maxwell Hartt argue that mega‐regions in the United States are more exposed to diseases earlier in pandemics because they are more connected nationally and internationally. They use the economic geography notions of ‘local buzz’ and ‘global pipelines’ to explain these patterns.
Andreas Kuebart and Martin Stabler identify key processes of disease diffusion to explain the spatial patterns of the COVID‐19 outbreak in Germany. Their study underlines the value of combining relational thinking with geographic analysis to better understand epidemic outbreaks in contemporary societies.
Huiwen Gong, Robert Hassink, Juntao Tan and Dacang Huang apply the notion of ‘regional resilience’ to assess short‐term recovery in China. They call for place‐specific and contextualised analyses that combine quantitative and qualitative data to assess recovery and resilience rates of Chinese regions.
Willem Boterman, studies the early demographic and geographic patterns of the COVID‐19 outbreak in the Netherlands. Contrary to studies from some other countries, he does not find evidence that the pandemic is related to population density. Municipalities with high shares of elderly populations are not hit harder by the virus. Boterman formulates two hypotheses to explain these patterns.
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