OAR@UM Collection:
/library/oar/handle/123456789/15390
2025-12-27T16:14:06ZUsing qualitative research in community engagement to capture and mitigate vulnerability mechanisms in the face of infectious diseases : insights from a research-based program in five European countries during the Covid-19 pandemic
/library/oar/handle/123456789/136559
Title: Using qualitative research in community engagement to capture and mitigate vulnerability mechanisms in the face of infectious diseases : insights from a research-based program in five European countries during the Covid-19 pandemic
Authors: Geise, Mandy; Osborne, Jacob; Grohma, Paul; Giles-Vernick, Tamara; Lana, Benedetta; Diagne, Papa Mamadou; Ocek, Zeliha; Cebron, Ursula Lipovec; Vodopivec, Neza; Brunec, Anja; Baldacchino, Jean Paul; Said, Maurice; Orsini, Gisella; Sultana, Victoria; Vaccaro, Concetta; Volkmann, Anna-Maria; Kutalek, Ruth; Dückers, Michel
Abstract: Various frameworks have been proposed for carrying out community engagement (CE) in the context of infectious
disease response, but few have done so through a lens of vulnerability and even fewer, if any, have compared cases across
countries. This paper reflects on the implementation of a project based on social science research and CE to capture and
mitigate vulnerability mechanisms, which was carried out in France, Germany, Italy, Malta, and Slovenia during the
COVID-19 pandemic. Using qualitative data collected through interviews, a focus group discussion, and project meetings,
we describe how a stepwise CE process was carried out in the context of an international, multi-sectoral project. As
such, this paper sheds light on the applicability of the methodology, the strategies followed, and overlapping themes
encountered during the CE implementation. In all five countries, researchers created overviews of multiple vulnerability
case descriptions situated in communities affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Several recurring themes played a role in
the CE process in the different settings: the challenges of finding, defining, and working with(in) communities; the role and
position of researchers “in action”; stakeholders and power dynamics; timing of stakeholder involvement; translating
qualitative data on vulnerability mechanisms into practical solutions; and sustainability and institutional integration. It is important to consider these themes when planning future initiatives to apply social and behavioral science methods to
address and mitigate vulnerabilities in communities confronted with pandemics or other crisis contexts.2025-01-01T00:00:00ZAnalytic approaches to the anthropology of the good : moral incoherence and mental health in the wake of COVID-19
/library/oar/handle/123456789/136413
Title: Analytic approaches to the anthropology of the good : moral incoherence and mental health in the wake of COVID-19
Authors: Baldacchino, Jean Paul
Abstract: Building on the anthropology of the good, this article seeks to apply a taxonomical approach inspired by analytical philosophy to the study of moral incoherence. The topic of moral incoherence is a growing concern in clinical contexts. Drawing on fieldwork and clinical data during the COVID-19 pandemic in Malta, this article brings together approaches from anthropology, psychiatry and psychology to look at the way in which such ‘moral breakdown’ has been studied in relation to mental health and existing diagnostic structures. Moral incoherence, it is proposed, can be conceived of as a problem in terms of rationality, which has implications for the imaginary coherence of the subject. This article, therefore, makes two primary contributions. It develops an approach to the anthropology of the good by means of an analytical reduction in terms of a series of ought statements. Secondly, it applies the approach to the problem of moral incoherence by engaging with various disciplinary perspectives, particularly those in psychiatry, psychology, and, to a lesser extent, philosophy. The implication of moral problems to mental health cannot be merely dismissed as the pathologisation of everyday life. Such problems are exacerbated in times of crisis, where the possibilities for coherence become increasingly challenged.2025-01-01T00:00:00ZDrifting in dark waters : Mediterranean boat journeys between (in)visibility and presence
/library/oar/handle/123456789/135815
Title: Drifting in dark waters : Mediterranean boat journeys between (in)visibility and presence
Authors: DeBono, Daniela
Abstract: Boats carrying people fleeing across the Mediterranean Sea often
depart at night. The boats are not visible to the authorities, or other vessels
traversing the same space. But it is this same play on (in)visibility that
enables these journeys of hope across borders. Last year over 150,000
people made it successfully across the central Mediterranean Sea. This
figure does not include those that perished or others who were pushed back.
In this article I interweave travellers’ personal experiences with the social
and political processes traversing this liquid border/space to capture a
snapshot of the various layers of these boat journeys. This will allow me to
draw out the paradoxes of (in)visibility and presence, and resistance and
subjugation, and therefore locate these invisible boats and journeys in the
web of global, geopolitical and historical processes that converge in this
historical juncture reminiscent of Arendtian ‘dark times’.2025-01-01T00:00:00ZThe Maltese don’t dance…
/library/oar/handle/123456789/133371
Title: The Maltese don’t dance…
Authors: Baldacchino, Jean Paul
Abstract: The Maltese Don't Dance... or so it would seem. According to the latest European
statistics on cultural participation, the Maltese are not really
keen on dancing. They have the lowest rates for participation
in this activity. According to the Eurobarometer Survey on
Cultural Participation (2013), dancing ranks as the most
popular 'artistic activity' in Europe. When asked whether
or not they either sang or danced in the preceding twelve
months, 12% of the European respondents answered "Yes". The respective statistics for Malta paint a starker picture.
Malta has the lowest percentage in Europe in terms of
participation in singing or dancing, with only two percent
having participated in one of the two activities. There are,
however, a large number of ballet schools in Malta which
seem to cater mostly for young girls with, however, a sharp
decline in interest after seventeen. [excerpt]2016-01-01T00:00:00Z