In Covid's wake How our politics failed us

Stephen Macedo, 1957-

Book - 2025

"An examination of the ways in which Covid policies, and the scientific debate which surrounded it, were politicized. In response to the Covid pandemic, public and private resources were expended on a vast scale-truly the equivalent of wartime. 2020 saw the greatest mobilization of emergency powers in human history: people around the world were confined to their homes, not allowed to attend religious services, see family living outside their households, or even take extended solitary walks outdoors. A few weeks after the first society-wide lockdowns in China and Italy, 3.9 billion people were living under some form of quarantine-half the world's population. In the aftermath of the pandemic, political theorist Stephen Macedo and po...litical scientist Frances Lee argue in this book that there is an urgent need to ask hard questions about the effectiveness and impact of these policies, especially as new studies about them emerge. Was it worth it? Did we do the right thing? Did we debate and deliberate adequately? Did scientists, public health officials, and others sometimes mislead the public or "economize" on the truth in presenting "the science"? Insofar as complexities were simplified, was this just effective public health messaging? If truths were trimmed, could this be justified as "noble lies" in the public interest? Can what seemed expedient in the short run be justified in the long run? And what should we learn about our successes and failures for the next pandemic or, for that matter, any other policy crisis in which it is necessary to rely upon scientific expertise? The book examines how public deliberation fared under Covid, providing a retrospective assessment of policy responses to the pandemic. Macedo and Lee evaluate the performance under pressure of the central truth-seeking institutions of liberal democracy: science, journalism, and universities broadly"--

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2nd Floor New Shelf 362.1962414/Macedo (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 9, 2026
Subjects
Published
Princeton : Princeton University Press [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Stephen Macedo, 1957- (author)
Other Authors
Frances E. Lee (author)
Physical Description
xiv, 373 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-364) and index.
ISBN
9780691267135
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • 1. Democracy uuder Covid: Introduction
  • 2. "Followiug the Science" before Covid
  • 3. Turuiug ou a Dime: Embracing China's Covid Model
  • 4. Partisan Pandemic: Stigmatizing Disagreement
  • 5. Laboratories of Democracy?
  • 6. Pay Any Price: Iguoriug the Costs of Covid Policy
  • 7. Science Beuds to Politics: Covid's Muddled Origins
  • 8. Politicized Science: Of Masks aud Mandates
  • 9. Noble Lies? Public Health Mis- and Disiuformation uuder Covid
  • 10. Coucludiug Reflections: Learuiug from the Politics of Crisis
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Macedo and Lee (both, Princeton Univ.) make a tremendous contribution by examining the state of scientific rigor and democratic deliberation during the COVID-19 epidemic and the lessons that can be learned. According to the authors, the book is about "[COVID] and politics, in the broadest sense of that latter term" (p. 3). It is a thorough retrospective examination of the policy response to COVID-19, critically assessing the role that politics, especially the current state of polarization, played in addressing the pandemic. The book is meticulously researched and detailed, yet an easy read. The lessons it presents are prescient and timely. It serves as a warning about the dangers that political polarization and groupthink pose to democratic deliberation and the damage they inflicted during the formulation of COVID-19 policy in the United States. The book is recommended to all readers and is accessible to general audiences and academics alike. It is strongly recommended for those studying public health, policy, public administration, and democratic theory, especially polarization. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals. --Chad Kinsella, Ball State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.