“…These investigations have illuminated not only the strategic role of cities and metropolitan regions as major “hot spots” of disease transmission, but the essential role of municipal, provincial, and regional governance systems, as well as community organizations, in animating public health responses to the pandemic. Among the key insights that have emerged from this outpouring of research, the following are particularly salient: - The neoliberalization of local public health infrastructures through decades of privatization and austerity has severely undermined the capacity of many municipal governments to manage the coronavirus pandemic and to confront its disastrous economic and public health consequences, especially for poor, racialized, marginalized, and/or vulnerable populations (Navarro, 2020; see also, more generally, Sparke and Williams, 2022).
- There has, nonetheless, been a broad range of local responses to the pandemic, leading to a profound variegation of public health conditions—manifested, for instance, in differential rates of transmission, morbidity and mortality, and widely varying degrees of containment and recovery pathways, around the world.
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