2021
DOI: 10.1111/bjso.12513
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The interactional production and breach of new norms in the time of COVID‐19: Achieving physical distancing in public spaces

Abstract: A key requirement of COVID-19 pandemic behavioural regulations in many countries was for people to 'physically distance' from one another, which meant departing radically from established norms of everyday human sociality.

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Cited by 15 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…It is worth considering, for instance, how such steps in some cases have been, could have been, or could still be taken to establish norms around protective behaviors in the COVID-19 pandemic—including to promote social distancing, mask-wearing, self-quarantining, and vaccinating (see Drury & Stokoe, 2022; Latkin et al, 2022; Neville et al, 2021; Young & Goldstein, 2021). These practices can pose self-control conflicts: While they can protect the self and others against a potentially serious illness, they may also pose short-term costs, such as forgoing social events or not seeing loved ones.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is worth considering, for instance, how such steps in some cases have been, could have been, or could still be taken to establish norms around protective behaviors in the COVID-19 pandemic—including to promote social distancing, mask-wearing, self-quarantining, and vaccinating (see Drury & Stokoe, 2022; Latkin et al, 2022; Neville et al, 2021; Young & Goldstein, 2021). These practices can pose self-control conflicts: While they can protect the self and others against a potentially serious illness, they may also pose short-term costs, such as forgoing social events or not seeing loved ones.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…COVID-19 has been likened to a breach experiment comparable to the ones that Garfinkel devised for his students to uncover the rules of everyday life (Drury & Stokoe, 2021;Scambler, 2020). COVID-19 and the measures taken to contain it led to a sudden change in taken-for-granted rules and routines of everyday life for CAs in Rwanda as elsewhere.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, keeping a 1.5 m distance from other people, while standing in a room, could be challenging, especially if there was no exact distance marking or indication in the surroundings, if the people were moving, and/or if there was a large number of people in a small space. Besides, keeping a distance required other individuals’ cooperation [ 24 ], and distinct individual perceptions could lead to coordination difficulties. In an observational study conducted on students seated in a university library in Canada at the same period of our second survey (March–April 2021), a relatively high compliance with both physical distancing and mask wearing (78%) was also documented [ 25 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%