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ARTICLE

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

 

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.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Lars Erik Løvaas Gjerde

Lars Erik Løvaas Gjerde is a researcher at the European University Institute. He holds a master’s degree in Sociology from the University of Oslo. His current research focuses on power, ideology and governmentality.

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