Global Health, Humanity and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Philosophical and Sociological Challenges and Imperatives
Chapter One Introduction: Humanity and Disease Discourse -- Chapter Two Toward a Fuller Understanding of the Enigma of Health -- Chapter Three Ubuntu and COVID-19: A Philosophical Reflection -- Chapter Four Limits of Science-based Approaches in Global Health: Socio-Cultural and Moral Lessons from Ebola and Covid-19 -- Chapter Five The Vaccination Mandate Debate Revisited -- Part II: Critical Framing of the Pandemic in Africa -- Chapter Six An African Perspective on the Ethics and Politics of Foreign Medical Aid in a Pandemic -- Chapter Seven Disease Discourses, African Knowledge Systems, and COVID-19 in Senegal -- Chapter Eight Ẹnulẹbọ: Ethical Imperative of Yorùbá Thought on Eating for Covid-19 Related Crises -- Chapter Nine Epidemiology and an Epistemic Evaluation of the Management of Covid-19 in Nigeria -- Chapter Ten Borders, Boundaries and Identities: Navigating the Barriers to Solidarity and Cohesion in a Pandemic -- Chapter Eleven Discourses of the Wandering Almajiri Child as Representation of the (Post-) COVID Generation -- Chapter Twelve Quarantining the Holy Spirit: Africa and the Pentecostal Economy of COVID-19 Pandemic -- Chapter Thirteen On Pandemic Planning and the Front-line Workers in Nigeria -- Chapter Fourteen Dialogism and Polyphony in the Interpretations of COVID-19 Discourse in Zimbabwe -- Part III: Representing COVID-19 -- Chapter Fifteen Cartooning COVID on Facebook -- Chapter Sixteen "It's in Your hands": Communicating a Pandemic to a Disengaged Public -- Chapter Seventeen Musical (Re)presentations of COVID-19 on Social Media among Young People in Nigeria -- Chapter Eighteen Covid-19, Food and Freedom to Worship: An Analytic Approach to Nigeria's Religioscape -- Chapter Nineteen Covid-19 Risk Communication and Community Engagement on Social Media in Nigeria -- Chapter Twenty COVID-19 (Post)proverbials: Twisting the Word Against the Virus.