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Children's Care for Public Health and Politically Expedient Care for Children in Aotearoa New Zealand's COVID-19 Pandemic

Care and Coronavirus

ISBN: 978-1-83797-311-8, eISBN: 978-1-83797-310-1

Publication date: 2 December 2024

Abstract

Managing public ‘affect’ was a critical component of Aotearoa New Zealand's COVID-19 policy approach, which was predicated on collective emotional feelings of calmness, compassion and trust. A long history of health promotion efforts have involved co-opting children as tools to manipulate (adult) public affect towards motivating behavioural change or accepting health interventions. Little research has yet considered the consequences of objectifying children for affect management in the name of public health. The Pandemic Generation study compared the perspectives of Auckland children aged 7–11, generated through co-drawing comics about their pandemic experience, with a critical discourse analysis of children's representation in New Zealand COVID-19 public health messaging. In this chapter, I argue that by leveraging performative care for children to manipulate an adult public affect, the New Zealand government erased children's subjectivities, their care-giving roles and contributions, further disenfranchising children as members of the ‘public’ in public health.

Keywords

Citation

Spray, J. (2024), "Children's Care for Public Health and Politically Expedient Care for Children in Aotearoa New Zealand's COVID-19 Pandemic", Disney, T. and Grimshaw, L. (Ed.) Care and Coronavirus (Emerald Studies in Child Centred Practice), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 81-95. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83797-310-120241006

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2025 Julie Spray. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited