How quickly might we forget the lessons of Covid-19?
My father still remembers the H3N2 influenza pandemic of 1968 when over a million people died worldwide.
My father still remembers the H3N2 influenza pandemic of 1968 when over a million people died worldwide.
Humanity has been here before, facing what appeared to be an imminent end (figure). The rise in nuclear weapons was rapid, from the first two used on Aug 6 and Aug 9, 1945, through to 10,000 held by 1960, almost 40,000 in 1970, and peaking at over 60,000 in the mid-1980s. At the time, it…
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On April 7, The Conversation published three graphs showing the rise of deaths from COVID-19 in seven countries. This is an update 20 days later.
Danny Dorling giving a short keynote at the British Sociological Association Annual Conference (on-line in a time of Covid19) on April 24th 2020.
Danny Dorling giving the final talk at the Geographical Association annual conference (on-line), on April 18th 2020
This article is republished from The Conversation – first published April 7th 2020
“But once this is done, there must be complete transparency about how the NHS came to be left in this exposed position, how social care had been stripped away, and how those in power will be held accountable.”
A message for A-Level geographers: Suddenly you have time on your hands. You would have been spending these weeks and months memorising facts for regurgitating.
We need to quickly accept that this is an era of slowdown, not fast-paced change.
For some time this pandemic will focus almost all of our attention. It is a tragedy that will play out differently
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
by Danny Dorling, University of Oxford The speed of the global spread of coronavirus is staggering.
Hensher contrasts the abuse Corbyn received while attempting to become Prime Minster with that Margaret Thatcher received when in office
Polly Neate is right that “social housing and homes for first-time buyers don’t have to be either/or”.
So much goes wrong when a state is at peak inequality. We convert offices into rabbit hutches for people to live in and their life expectancy also falls.