Navigating a Pandemic: Australian Practices and Perspectives on Information, Services and Technologies during the COVID-19 Crisis
Date
2022
Authors
Deejay, Aleks
Henne, Kathryn
Carneiro Alphonso, Franz
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Volume Title
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The Australian National University
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has become a monumental global disruption. It has required
people to adopt new behaviours as circumstances change and adapt to governmentenacted measures. Australians have experienced more restrictive pandemic-related
mandates than many other countries, as demonstrated by Melbourne becoming the most
locked-down city in the world. In addition to limiting mobility, restrictions have prompted
individuals, families and communities to develop new daily routines in public and at
home.
Members of the ANU Justice and Technoscience Lab (JusTech), which is based within the
School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet), interviewed 40 Australian
residents in 2020 and 2021 to better understand how they have managed the
circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic. The study's objective was to acquire a more
detailed understanding of how people went about trying to obtain critical support during
a large-scale health crisis and how they perceived and interpreted the information and
resources they obtained. Interviews explored how participants navigated systems in the
pursuit of information, resources and services and how they adapted their everyday
activities as public health and regulatory measures changed.
This report presents key findings from interviews to provide a comprehensive overview
of how participants have coped during the COVID-19 pandemic and how they have
sought out resources during periods of disruption, isolation and quarantine. It also
captures how practices and strategies varied among individuals and groups. Findings
offer insights that may enhance service provision and systems design decisions to better
support Australian residents as they seek information and services.
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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