Social Sciences and Humanities Open (Jan 2021)

The impact and implications of COVID-19: Reflections on the Zimbabwean society

  • Innocent Chirisa,
  • Brilliant Mavhima,
  • Tariro Nyevera,
  • Andrew Chigudu,
  • Albert Makochekanwa,
  • Joefrey Matai,
  • Thebeth Masunda,
  • Eve K. Chandaengerwa,
  • Francis Machingura,
  • Stanzia Moyo,
  • Halleluah Chirisa,
  • Marvellous Mhloyi,
  • Ashton Murwira,
  • Lawrence Mhandara,
  • Rosalie Katsande,
  • Kudakwashe Muchena,
  • Elton Manjeya,
  • Teresa Nyika,
  • Langton Mundau

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 100183

Abstract

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The article is an attempt to provide a kaleidoscopic interpretation of how social science scholarship views the socio-cultural terrain of Zimbabwe during and after the global health crisis, and the societal and business haemorrhage induced by the coronavirus (COVID-19). Built through a multi-perspective and triangulation involving a modified Delphic approach that engages archival methods involving document and literature review, content analysis and expert interpretation; the article unveils the various effects of COVID-19 on Zimbabwe. It is concluded that COVID-19 by its nature is disruptive to everyday life, restrictive to human-social relations and is an instigator to tradition, spirituality and intellectuality in the country. The challenge of the virus brings to society a deliberate consciousness that global processes and events are converging (borders are porous) while local embeddedness is being entrenched through practices like lockdowns and confinement.

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