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    Title: Comparing the Governance of the Pandemic between Vaccine-Free and Free Vaccine Strategies: Thick Governmentality in Taiwan
    Authors: 陳宗文
    Chen, Tzung-wen
    Contributors: 社會系
    Keywords: Korea;Taiwan;COVID-19;thick governmentality;vaccination policy
    Date: 2024-03
    Issue Date: 2024-06-03 14:55:21 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: The concept of “thick governmentality” is intended to elucidate characteristics of vaccine-related governance of public health during the COVID-19 pandemic in Taiwan. It is proposed that Taiwan passed from a vaccine-free phase to a free vaccine phase. The two phases differ in strategies for protecting the population of a society (or a social body) from COVID-19. It is argued that the rationales behind the strategies are heterogeneous and distributed among different parts of the social body, which is a complicated composition of segments or layers from individual bodies to the state. In short, thick governmentality is characterized by multi-layered governance, diverse rationalities, and inconsistent truth regimes. Evidence shows that the free vaccine strategy is not possible without continuous implementation of vaccine-free strategies, especially those that are directly associated with economic compensation or subsidies. Accordingly, the social body of Taiwan was well defended by thick governmentality at the height of the pandemic.
    Relation: AAS 2024 Annual Conference, The Association for Asian Studies
    Data Type: conference
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Sociology] Proceedings

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