Governing humans and ‘things’: power and rule in Norway during the Covid-19 pandemic

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Abstract

This text focuses on the mentalities and technologies of power employed by the Norwegian government as it attempts to control the Covid-19 pandemic. Utilizing governmentality studies and a Foucauldian discourse analysis, I find life itself to be given primacy within a biopolitical problem space where the government seeks to contain the spread of Covid-19. The government primarily rationalizes its exercises of power in a liberal manner while employing a complex set of liberal and coercive technologies, which it channels towards both the human population, which serves as an object of administration, and Covid-19, which serves as an object of domination.

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Gjerde, L. E. L. (2021). Governing humans and ‘things’: power and rule in Norway during the Covid-19 pandemic. Journal of Political Power, 14(3), 472–492. https://doi.org/10.1080/2158379X.2020.1870264

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