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Immunity as Relativity: German Vaccination Campaigns and Debates in Times of COVID-19
Immunität als Relativitätstheorie: Deutsche Impfkampagnen und Debatten während der Coronapandemie
[journal article]
Abstract COVID-19 was a shock. The shutdown of entire societies was considered a historic turning point already in 2020. Vaccinations promised a way out of the crisis. Even before the vaccination campaigns began, they were seen as a weapon that would decide the war against the pandemic, even as a promise of ... view more
COVID-19 was a shock. The shutdown of entire societies was considered a historic turning point already in 2020. Vaccinations promised a way out of the crisis. Even before the vaccination campaigns began, they were seen as a weapon that would decide the war against the pandemic, even as a promise of salvation. These hopes were dashed in 2021. Vaccinations offered a relatively high level of, but not absolute, protection. Vaccinated people were still contagious and thus a risk to others. My article traces the history of this disappointment and the attempts to solve it. I focus on German debates about prioritising vaccine distribution, dealing with side effects, and debates about compulsory vaccination and increasing social pressure on the unvaccinated. Vaccination campaigns thus serve as a probe with which to examine social orders and social distortions. At the same time, I place the current developments in a historical perspective. I ask both about the historical roots of today's debates and about new developments since 2020 that only become visible in a historical perspective.... view less
Keywords
Federal Republic of Germany; health policy; vaccination; campaign; crisis management (econ., pol.); public health
Classification
Health Policy
Free Keywords
COVID-19; history of pandemics; vaccines; compulsory vaccination
Document language
English
Publication Year
2021
Page/Pages
p. 316-338
Journal
Historical Social Research, 46 (2021) 4
Issue topic
Forum: Vaccination and Society: A History from Smallpox to COVID-19 in Germany
ISSN
0172-6404
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed