COVID-19: Proportionality, Public Policy and Social Distance explores
the social and political response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It details
the sociological aspects of the spread of the virus, the role played by
social distancing in virus mitigation, and the comparative effect of
social proximity and distance on national anti-viral behavior. Peter
Murphy discusses various public policy approaches to the pandemic and
their successes and failures. In this engaging analysis, he investigates
the way that contemporary societies think about risk, threat and harm,
and how social mood affected the response to COVID-19.