The Covid-19 crisis : from a question of an epidemic to a societal questioning /

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: ProQuest (Firm)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: London, UK : Hoboken, NJ : ISTE, UK ; Wiley, 2022.
Series:Health engineering and society series. Health and patients set ; v.4.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year)
Table of Contents:
  • Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Deciphering the Covid-19 Epidemic and Analysis of Its Controllability / Jacques Barnouin
  • 1.1. Facts and lessons learned from the emergence of Covid-19 in France
  • 1.1.1. SARS-CoV-2 and emerging risks
  • 1.1.2. emergence of the emergence
  • 1.1.3. Oise cluster
  • 1.1.4. Haut-Rhin and the Grand Est mega-cluster
  • 1.2. Characteristics of an outbreak control system that could potentially control Covid-19
  • 1.2.1. Detection of the atypical and the bizarre
  • 1.2.2. Three levels of pre-positioning
  • 1.2.3. Computer tools for anticipation and analysis
  • 1.3. Health rules and scientific lines of thought and action
  • 1.4. Geographical distribution of Covid-19 cases and differences in population susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2 infection
  • 1.4.1. Analyzing the geography of the epidemic to better understand it
  • 1.4.2. Covid-19 in the world
  • 1.4.3. Possible explanations for differences in population susceptibility to SARS-CoV-2
  • 1.5. Conclusion: challenging, preparing, uniting
  • 1.5.1. manageable crisis
  • 1.5.2. crisis without a written end
  • 1.5.3. crisis alien to our societal software
  • 1.6. References
  • ch. 2 Story of a Pandemic Foretold: Focus on the Covid-19 Vaccine / Jean-Pierre Girardeau
  • 2.1. 2002, the first warning
  • 2.2. 2012, a second warning
  • 2.3. 2019, the pandemic
  • 2.4. SARS-CoV-2: far from unknown
  • 2.5. Vaccine design possible as early as 2010
  • 2.6. Lack of a vaccine: a collective responsibility
  • 2.7. SARS-CoV vaccinology: a pathway for rapid development of Covid-19 vaccines
  • 2.8. Finalized and planned vaccines
  • 2.9. Conclusion: viral aggressor and human disruptor
  • 2.10. References
  • ch. 3 Remote Working after Lockdown / Emmanuel Mignot
  • 3.1. Elements in the development of remote working
  • 3.2. Findings following lockdown
  • 3.3. Foreseeable developments
  • 3.3.1. Fragile nature of the concept of enterprise
  • 3.3.2. Development of mixed statuses (self-employed employees)
  • 3.3.3. Generalized multi-employment
  • 3.3.4. Development of globalized employment platforms
  • 3.4. Obstacles to the widespread development of remote working
  • 3.5. References
  • ch. 4 Digital Revolution and Religious Fact in the Context of Lockdowns Linked to the Coronavirus / Francois Demongeot
  • 4.1. Introduction
  • 4.2. lockdown concept
  • 4.3. Religions and religious facts
  • 4.4. confinement concept and religious practices
  • 4.5. Religions in the face of great historical epidemics
  • 4.6. Impact of the digital revolution on religions and their practices
  • 4.7. Main digital tools used during the Covid-19 pandemic
  • 4.8. Adapting religious practices during lockdown for the coronavirus crisis
  • 4.8.1. Christian worship
  • 4.8.2. Jewish worship
  • 4.8.3. Muslim worship
  • 4.9. Digital revolution and religious practices: the future
  • 4.10. References
  • ch. 5 Old and New Rituals Throughout the Covid-19 Pandemic / Bruno Salgues
  • 5.1. ritual notion
  • 5.1.1. Religious and secular rituals
  • 5.1.2. Function of ritual recognition
  • 5.2. Decline of traditional rituals
  • 5.2.1. Causes of decline
  • 5.2.2. Contradictory manifestations of the decline of rituals
  • 5.3. Old rituals substituted by new ritual phenomena
  • 5.3.1. In social life
  • 5.3.2. Rituals as an expression of a current of thought
  • 5.4. Poorly understood rituals
  • 5.4.1. Unknowingly engaging in rituals
  • 5.4.2. Dealing with the new place of rituals
  • 5.4.3. Protective role of the State
  • 5.5. Performative rituals
  • 5.5.1. Rituals and order
  • 5.5.2. Rituals of protection
  • 5.5.3. Rituals of inversion
  • 5.5.4. Fighting the ritual with disorder
  • 5.5.5. Rituals of opposition
  • 5.5.6. Integrated rituals
  • 5.6. Death and culture
  • 5.6.1. Forms of interrogation
  • 5.6.2. Halloween: the manipulated birth of a ritual
  • 5.6.3. Conjuring death
  • 5.7. Example of the handshake
  • 5.8. Political rituals
  • 5.9. Conclusion
  • 5.10. References
  • ch. 6 New Innovators in the Footsteps of the Coronavirus / Guy Caverot
  • 6.1. Introduction
  • 6.2. Pre-Covid innovators
  • 6.2.1. Generations of innovation
  • 6.3. Types of innovators
  • 6.3.1. explorer
  • 6.3.2. rebel (disobedience and disorder)
  • 6.3.3. Corporate hacking
  • 6.4. m-Covid innovators (2020--2021)
  • 6.4.1. birth of innovations in times of crisis
  • 6.4.2. Examples of innovations arising in times of crisis
  • 6.4.3. Motivations of innovators
  • 6.5. Post-Covid innovators
  • 6.5.1. Sense and common sense
  • 6.5.2. Collective and remote working tools
  • 6.5.3. Balance of activity-nature-assessment
  • 6.5.4. Innovations for humans
  • 6.5.5. Organizational innovations
  • 6.5.6. Technical innovations
  • 6.6. Conclusion
  • 6.7. References
  • ch. 7 Behavior and Anticipation of the Covid-19 Crisis / Christian Schoen
  • 7.1. Preamble
  • 7.2. Anticipation, uncertainty and acceptability
  • 7.3. More questions
  • 7.4. From information to communication and education
  • 7.5. Markers of anticipation
  • 7.6. Xth wave
  • 7.7. Conclusion: much remains to be done in the study of behavior related to health crises
  • 7.8. References
  • ch. 8 Humans, Digital Technology and the SARS-CoV-2 Health Crisis / Judith Nicogossian
  • 8.1. Introduction
  • 8.2. Physical and digital communication in a crisis situation
  • 8.3. little reminder about communication
  • 8.3.1. Use case: the Covid-19 health crisis
  • 8.3.2. Worrying?
  • 8.4. Living and the organization of life
  • 8.5. Different value systems in conflict
  • 8.5.1. Reason and emotion (between individual and person)
  • 8.5.2. Governance by affect
  • 8.5.3. Laughter
  • 8.5.4. Fear
  • 8.6. French communication on the virus
  • 8.6.1. Myth of war
  • 8.6.2. Sensemaking
  • 8.6.3. Importance of rituals
  • 8.7. Healing (medicine) and caring (attention)
  • 8.8. People and the Internet: from physical to digital
  • 8.8.1. Infobesity
  • 8.8.2. Digimal
  • 8.8.3. Digital obscurantism
  • 8.9. Phygital techniques
  • 8.10. Conclusion
  • 8.11. References
  • ch. 9 Will the Covid-19 Pandemic be an Opportunity to Implement the Principle of Sustainable Development? / Jean-Paul Bois-Margnac
  • 9.1. Introduction
  • 9.2. Economic liberalism: a now dominant ideology
  • 9.3. effective pragmatics encouraged by argued academic theses
  • 9.4. deceptive "decline"
  • 9.5. Suffering from the predations of the deregulated economic order
  • 9.6. How the post-Covid-19 era could bring about change
  • 9.7. Principles of sustainable development, foundations of a new social contract
  • 9.8. Beyond the citizen and the citizen-consumer, a new political figure
  • 9.9. Towards a new morality
  • 9.10. Conclusion: uncertainty and unpredictability
  • 9.11. References
  • ch. 10 Pandemic Has Invited Itself into a World in the Midst of a Crisis of Meaning / Philippe Tronc
  • 10.1. Foreword
  • 10.2. Giving meaning
  • 10.3. Crisis in personal behavior
  • 10.4. Crisis of business models
  • 10.5. Crisis of our social models
  • 10.6. health crisis as seen from France
  • 10.7. Conclusion
  • 10.8. References.