Videos

Video: Improving the Response to COVID-19

January 20, 2021 2632
In order to address the issues surrounding COVID-19 and its collateral effects, Social Science Space is presenting free downloads of the book Together Apart: the Psychology of COVID-19. To download an uncorrected proof version of the book, click here.

When it comes to COVID-19, we’re all in it together. That statement, while obvious, is not always how people react. Why is that, and what does that mean to everyone else? How would understanding this improve our response to the pandemic?

Near what we now know to be the lengthy saga of the COVID-19 pandemic, four psychologists collaborating remotely put together the edited volume Together Apart: The Psychology of COVID-19 in record time for SAGE Publishing (which released the entire book for free download on Social Science Space in May).

Those authors –Jolanda Jetten, professor of social psychology and Australian Laureate Fellow at the University of Queensland; Stephen Reicher, Wardlaw Professor of Psychology at the University of St. Andrews; S. Alexander Haslam, professor of psychology and Australian Laureate Fellow at the University of Queensland; and Tegan Cruwys, senior research fellow at the Australian National University – were working at warp speed for a serious academic endeavor.

Now, in the dawn of 2021, they are revisiting their work and that of their contributors in a series of seven videos in which they talk with the academics who wrote edited volume’s various chapters. In this second video, Jetten is joined by Jack Dovidio, professor of psychology and public health at Yale University, whose chapter on a common identity closes the book.

Here, Dovidio answers questions about how the us-versus-them dynamic affects the response to COVID-19, why having a common identity matters in fighting the spread of the disease, and why it’s proving so hard to develop that sense of common identity.

“When you think about somebody as an in-group member, your trust them more, have more empathy, you care about them …,” Dovidio explains. “Many of the things we do to protect against the spread of COVID has an altruistic aspect to it. I wear a mask, in part to protect me, but to protect other people. I’m going to be more likely to engage in these communal behaviors that will benefit other people if I think of them as members of my own group.”

Further videos in the series will appear on Wednesdays for the next five weeks.


The series so far:

Social influence during COVID-19 | Alex Haslam, Nik Steffens, Matthew Hornsey and Frank Mols

Related Articles

Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Go With It? 
Insights
December 2, 2025

Women Will Inherit Trillions in the ‘Great Wealth Transfer’ – What Will They Go With It? 

Read Now
Devyani Sharma on Accents
Social Science Bites
December 1, 2025

Devyani Sharma on Accents

Read Now
Frank Keil on Causal Thinking
Social Science Bites
November 3, 2025

Frank Keil on Causal Thinking

Read Now
The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth
Public Policy
October 17, 2025

The World of Criminal Psychologists Expands to Include Crimes Against Planet Earth

Read Now
Ziyad Marar on Noticing

Ziyad Marar on Noticing

The new book Noticing: How We Attend to the World and Each Other opens with a quote from psychologist William James: “Only […]

Read Now
Victor Buchli on Life in Low-Earth Orbit

Victor Buchli on Life in Low-Earth Orbit

As an anthropologist, Victor Buchli has one foot in the Neolithic past and another in the space-faring future. A professor of material […]

Read Now
Rejecting University Rankings: Throwing the Baby Out With the Bath Water

Rejecting University Rankings: Throwing the Baby Out With the Bath Water

This week Berend van der Kolk published a call to ban university rankings. He concludes: ”So, let’s have (inter)national and/or local discussions […]

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments