“…Related work we have published in and on COVID‐19 has made allied arguments about health citizenship and biological sub‐citizenship existing on a graduated spectrum of inequalities that were at once exposed and exacerbated by the pandemic, but also mediated by intersecting conjunctural conditions ranging from carcerality and ‘emergent’ vulnerability to mutuality, solidarity, and counter‐hegemonic agency (Clarke & Barnett, 2023; Herrick et al., 2022; Mould et al., 2022; Schliehe et al., 2023; Sparke & Anguelov, 2020; Van Holstein et al., 2023). Addressing such influences in relation to the post‐pandemic city, another recent contribution points, like Senanayake, to the more‐than‐human political‐ecologies that also condition bio(in)security and associated health vulnerabilities (Marvin et al., 2023).…”