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Abi Rached, Joelle

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Abi Rached

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Joelle

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Abi Rached, Joelle

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication

    Governing Life and the Economy: Exploring the Role of Trust in the Covid-19 Pandemic

    (Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics, 2021-07-14) Abi Rached, Joelle; Diwan, Ishac

    When comparing both GDP loss and mortality across countries, it appears that countries that have managed to save more lives during the Covid-19 pandemic have also managed to save their economies better. What accounts for these stark differences in country performances? In this article, we argue that a salient feature of economic and health performance is the degree of trust populations have in their governments. We set up a heuristic analytical framework that models this relation, under particular assumptions about what drives government and individual behavior, in order to better understand the mechanisms that may be at work. We identify three key roles that trust in government may play in enforcing social distancing policies, conveying credible information for individual decision-making, and shaping government attitudes towards risk. We argue that these implications are consistent with the empirical evidence. We also discuss the relevance of other forms of trust, namely, interpersonal trust and trust in science.

  • Publication

    Critical Friendship After the Pandemic

    (Copenhagen Business School, 2023-12-29) Abi Rached, Joelle

    Are critique and the “art of governing” antithetical? The aim of this article is to examine this tension that was laid bare by the Covid-19 pandemic by introducing “critical friendship” as a conceptual framework for a constructive interdisciplinary engagement with science in a post-pandemic era. It does so by drawing on several works and insights: (i) Michel Foucault’s notion of “critical attitude” as well as his assessment of philosophy as providing a “diagnosis of the present;” (ii) Bruno Latour and colleagues’ idea of a “critical zone” or what I call a horizontal epistemology of critique; (iii) Aristotle’s notion of friendship as being necessary for the “common good;” and finally (iv) Jacques Derrida’s interpretation of the messianic character of friendship in the constitution of progressive democracies. Whereas critical theory has been described as either “explanatory-diagnostic” or “emancipatory-utopian,” a critical friendship approach aims to be both diagnostic and emancipatory in an age of uncertainty and democratic backsliding.

  • Publication

    ʿAṣfūriyyeh A History of Madness, Modernity, and War in the Middle East

    (2022-12-15) Abi Rached, Joelle; Satin, David