The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly transformed the sense of space. The experience of the crisis did not remain confined to the health dimension but spread globally over the most varied facets of human society and its daily territorial experience. Certainly, this complex of collective experiences has led to a rethinking of the world, starting with the govern patterns, the systems and the power relations that underpin the Anthropocene paradigm, but also of its interpretive models._x000D_
Syndemia has shaken the foundations of medical knowledge and its projection on the ground, the health care system. Out of this crisis, however, has developed an opportunity: to open the terrain of health, well-being, and care to other knowledge and techniques. Therefore, the proposed contribution focuses on the crisis and the related transformative impulse of the relationship between care and the land, contemplating the new meanings of the concept of care and the society of care introduced by the feminist literature. This research It aims to present the renewed perception of well-being, health and related spaces of care, analyzing the needs, desires and struggles for health and care of the inhabitants of the Lazio Region, comparing territories with different levels and forms of anthropization and urbanization._x000D_
The push toward the transformation of the model of care, closely interconnected with the principle of proximity, has been partly taken up by the Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza (PNRR), where mission 6c1 calls for the creation of a new territorial network of community infrastructures. Yet in practice, deep gaps remain between the transformative goals of institutions and those of the communities that inhabit local territories. What new forms of territoriality, therefore, stand behind the new models of care and healthcare?_x000D_
Daniele Pasqualetti
phd, Università di Roma Tre
ID Abstract: 872