The fourth seminar on lessons from Covid-19 invites Martin Grander, 
Urban Studies researcher at Malmö university and Louise Dalingwater, 
professor of British politics at Sorbonne University.
Topics of the seminar:
1) How inequalities in housing affect the pandemic and how the 
pandemic aggravates housing inequality. Martin Grander shares his 
recently published work for the Delegation Against Segregation (Delmos) 
on the importance of housing and the divergent effects of prevailing 
housing inequality during Covid-19. Many households with good finances 
have been able to look for homes with access to a garden or secondary 
housing in rural areas as a result of more extensive work from home and 
canceled holiday trips. In the other end, people in households with weak
 finances are more overcrowded and have difficulty avoiding the 
infection both at work and in the home environment. The consequences of 
these disparities will be addressed in the seminar.
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2) Grass roots organizations and marginalized migrants in the UK and 
France Louise Dalingwater is a member of the Precision Health and 
Everyday Democracy network. She will share the role of civil society in 
ensuring provision of health and social care to marginalized migrants 
during Covid-19 and the obstacles they encounter in their work. Her 
examples will be mainly from France and the UK. The presentation is a 
result of reflections which emerged in a research project currently 
underway with PHED members Michael Strange, Elisabeth Mangrio and 
Slobodan Zdravkovic, which examines the multi-level coherence with 
respect to acknowledging the situation of marginalized migrants.