Different starting points
To what extent has your experience of Covid-19 been impacted by your own starting points or those of your local community?
To what extent has your experience of Covid-19 been impacted by your own starting points or those of your local community?
The different contexts and situations we all found ourselves in before the pandemic proved critical in our ability to meet the challenges of the pandemic, quickly and responsively.
The same is true for the communities we live in, the organisations we engage with or the companies we work for.
Community doesn’t come out of nothing and I really feel that looking back on it… We just had our eighth AGM last week and I’m like holy moly, it has been eight years! It takes so much time to build that community in an urban setting, where people’s sense of community is so temporary a lot of the time.
"There's so much deprivation right next door to the gentrification of other areas where it's million-pound houses - all within a mile of each other. So how would you start to speak with a common voice when people's experiences are so different?”
Advisor in person and community centred approaches, Greater Manchester
“Communities with historic mistrust of medical intervention, “If someone says ‘the vaccine is about making GP’s rich’ or ‘I don’t trust Pfizer, look at what they did to our communities...’, the question is really, what did ‘they’ do to our communities?”
Samira Ben Omar, co-founder Community Voice, North West London
Nick Dixon, senior advisor in person and community centred approaches, Greater Manchester
Polarisation and division growing and showing up in communities
“The pandemic has deeply affected us all – but not equally. The crisis has ruthlessly exposed how our vulnerability to shocks varies hugely, determined by a complex web of existing inequalities, across genders, age groups, races, income levels, social classes and places.”
Unequal Britain report (2021)
“14 million people, a fifth of the population, live in poverty. Four million of these are more than 50% below the poverty line, and 1.5 million are destitute, unable to afford basic essentials. For almost one in every two children to be poor in twenty-first century Britain is not just a disgrace, but a social calamity and an economic disaster, all rolled into one.”
UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights (2018)
To what extent has your experience of Covid-19 been impacted by your own starting points or those of your local community?
How have the cuts in public funding impacted you, your family and your local community over the last decade?
What did power and privilege mean to you before the pandemic?
To what extent do you feel the pull of the old and the familiar in your own life and the communities and institutions that you are a part of?
Where were you seeing energy for change before the pandemic?
What has been your experience of engaging with public, voluntary and other services – to what extent did you feel they were designed to meet your needs?