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ID188684
Title ProperIndia’s Handling of the Covid-19 Crisis
Other Title InformationCould a Rights-Based Approach Overcome Systematic Inadequacies?
LanguageENG
AuthorNarayana, Sharmila ;  Chaly, Nia Susan
Summary / Abstract (Note)Covid-19 exposed the fragility and inadequacies in India’s health care system, especially in its public health services. The sudden lockdown imposed during the first wave of the virus severely impacted the livelihoods of millions of migrant workers. Then, in spite of warnings about an impending second wave of infection, the government’s failure to prepare the health infrastructure, together with delays in vaccine distribution, cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. Unlike the first wave of infection, the second wave impacted rural India very badly. Taking into consideration the existing social hierarchies and inequalities, it was marginalised groups of the population who bore the brunt of the pandemic. This article analyses the failures of the Indian government in handling the Covid-19 crisis, especially during the second wave, and concludes by suggesting ways in which the state needs to intervene to avert disasters of this kind in the future. It argues for the adoption of a ‘rights-based’ approach to public health on the grounds that successive governments have not been properly held to account for their long-term failures to address the issue.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Affairs Vol. 53, No.4; Nov 2022: p.873-887
Journal SourceAsian Affairs Vol: 53 No 4
Key WordsGovernance ;  Informal Sector ;  Migrants ;  Lockdown ;  Public Health Care


 
 
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