Closing the Doors on Health Nationalism: The Non-emptiness of the Legal Duty to Cooperate in Pandemic Response under Lex Specialis

R. Essawy
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Abstract

No one is safe until everyone is safe. Although this phrase has received wide consensus during COVID-19, this pandemic has witnessed a surge in health nationalism. States have imposed export restrictions on COVID-19-related medical supplies and vaccines seeking to preserve them for their own populations. This has adversely affected the availability of those necessary tools in other countries undermining their efforts in fighting the pandemic. Thus, it could be argued that States have violated their obligation to cooperate under Art. 44 of the 2005 World Health Organisation (WHO) International Health Regulations (IHR). Nevertheless, States’ export restrictions have been legally justified under the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs (GATT). Does this mean that the duty to cooperate is an empty obligation that fails to counter health nationalism? It is the purpose of this paper to demonstrate otherwise using the principle of lex specialis derogat legi generali. Under this principle, the duty to cooperate in pandemic response under Art. 44 of the IHR prevails over States’ rights under gatt, rendering health nationalism legally unjustified.
关上卫生民族主义的大门:特别法下流行病应对合作法律义务的非空性
所有人都安全了才算安全。虽然这句话在2019冠状病毒病期间得到了广泛共识,但这次大流行见证了卫生民族主义的激增。各国对与covid -19相关的医疗用品和疫苗实施了出口限制,试图为本国民众保留这些用品和疫苗。这对其他国家获得这些必要工具产生了不利影响,破坏了它们防治这一流行病的努力。因此,可以辩称,各国违反了2005年世界卫生组织《国际卫生条例》第44条规定的合作义务。然而,根据贸易和关税总协定(关贸总协定),各国的出口限制在法律上是合理的。这是否意味着合作的义务是一种空洞的义务,无法对抗卫生民族主义?本文的目的是利用特别法的一般法律的克减原则来证明这一点。根据这一原则,《国际卫生条例》第44条规定的合作应对大流行病的义务优先于关贸总协定规定的国家权利,因此卫生民族主义在法律上是不合理的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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