DEES on COVID-19

Essays on the pandemic in Eastern Europe

In Spring 2020, DEES members produced a series of video essays critically examining how states and societies in Eastern Europe have responded to, and thought about, the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and the disease it causes in humans, COVID-19. Each essay draws on long-term, direct engagement with people in the region and with scholarship written in the languages of the region. You can watch the videos or click on the links below to read text versions. We hope you enjoy these essays and we look forward to your comments!

Jessica Pisano, Introduction to DEES essays on COVID-19
Orsolya Lehotai, COVID-19 and Hungarian Democracy
Elisabeta Pop, “Hitler and White Asparagus: The Pandemic in Romania”
Dina Shvetsov, “Russian Governmentality and COVID-19”
Malkhaz Toria, “Old Wine in New Bottles: Church and State in Georgia During the Pandemic”
Masha Shynkarenko, “What’s Wrong with Ukraine’s Response to COVID-19”
Karolina Koziura, “Voices from the Polish Borderland”