STAY HOME: The home during the corona crisis - and after

Grant number: Unknown

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Key facts

  • Disease

    COVID-19
  • Funder

    Carlsberg Foundation
  • Principal Investigator

    Professor Mette Birkedal Bruun
  • Research Location

    Denmark
  • Lead Research Institution

    University of Copenhagen
  • Research Priority Alignment

    N/A
  • Research Category

    Secondary impacts of disease, response & control measures

  • Research Subcategory

    Social impacts

  • Special Interest Tags

    N/A

  • Study Type

    Non-Clinical

  • Clinical Trial Details

    N/A

  • Broad Policy Alignment

    Pending

  • Age Group

    Unspecified

  • Vulnerable Population

    Unspecified

  • Occupations of Interest

    Unspecified

Abstract

What 'STAY HOME: The home during the corona crisis - and after' examines how the corona crisis pressures the functions and boundaries of "home". We shall review changes, risks and opportunities inherent in this situation. Focusing on the intersections of multifunctional spaces, digital practices, family relations and existential beliefs, the inter-disciplinary STAY HOME research-team will develop research methods fit to gather, analyse and convey domestic experiences during the crisis. STAY HOME examines the home as a site where social structures and autonomous existence collide and are negotiated within architectural and digital spaces. We aim to identify risks and opportunities uncovered and created by the corona crisis, asking: What counts as a good home, when and for whom? Why STAY HOME identifies, gathers and organizes insights and experiences related to the home which are important to preserve beyond the crisis - either because they are problematic or even risky or because they have an unforeseen potential for long-term advantages. The project has a here-and-now dimension in that we will preserve experience while it is close at hand. But the importance rests above all with the long-range perspective. In STAY HOME we shall harvest insights that can contribute to a human-centred organization of "home" in all its material, technical, social and existential facets. How What counts as a good home, when and for whom? are questions that demand a concerted, interdisciplinary effort. STAY HOME unites scholars from architecture, family studies, technology studies and theology for collaborative research into ethnographic archives catalogued during the first months of the crisis, including material gathered in Deltagelsens grammatik (VELUX Foundation / Winthereik & Munk), in the diary project of the National Museum (VELUX Foundation) and by crisis centres. In our analysis of this material we shall identify a cluster of common themes suited to an integrated interdisciplinary inquiry that will be conducted in exchange with ongoing research into the histories of the early modern home at the Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Privacy Studies. SSR STAY HOME has a documentation component. We are going to gather and analyse domestic experience during the corona crisis. Some of these experiences are novel (home schooling, professional meetings from bedrooms and kitchens), others excalate exisiting patterns (domestic violence, working from home). The project will be an archive for experiences of "home" in its different facets. It is our ultimate goal to identify the opportunities and risks that the corona crisis has disclosed or created. STAY HOME will glean insights to benefit our homes as architectural, social, digital and existential spaces. It is our aim, for example, to leave material traces not only in future forms of domestic archtecture, but also in the informed handling of domestic crises.

Publicationslinked via Europe PMC

Development and Validation of the Intimate Partner Violence Workplace Disruptions Assessment (IPV-WDA).

Elucidating directed neural dynamics of scene construction across memory and imagination

Implementing a Novel Resident-Led Peer Support Program for Emergency Medicine Resident Physicians.

Cross-Activity Analysis of CRISPR/Cas9 Editing in Gene Families of <i>Solanum lycopersicum</i> Detected by Long-Read Sequencing.

Creating health systems citizens: enhanced professional identity formation through a para-curricular distinction track in health systems transformation and leadership.

A Comparison of Clinical Diagnostic Classification Criteria Used in Longitudinal Cohort Studies of the Alzheimer's Disease Continuum: A Systematic Review.

Identification and Characterization of a Rare Exon 22 Duplication in <i>CFTR</i> in Two Families.

Structural Rearrangement in Cyclic Cu(II) Pyridyltriazole Complexes: Oxidation of Dabco to Oxalate and CO<sub>2</sub> Conversion to Carbonate.

Administration of FOLFIRINOX for Advanced Pancreatic Cancer: Physician Practice Patterns During Early Use.