International Law in a Time of Pandemic

IF 0.3 Q3 LAW
R. Buchan, E. Crawford, Rain Liivoja
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

To say that this issue of the Journal has been produced under unusual circumstances would be an understatement. When we began work on the issue in March 2020, the seriousness of the ‘coronavirus disease 2019’ (‘covid-19’) outbreak was starting to become clear. Already in January, the Director-General of the World Health Organization (who) had declared the covid-19 outbreak a ‘public health emergency of international concern’ (pheic),1 that is to say, as an ‘extraordinary event’ deemed under the International Health Regulations ‘to constitute a public health risk to other States through the international spread of disease’ and ‘to potentially require a coordinated international response’.2 In March, the Director-General further declared the outbreak a ‘pandemic’.3 The so-called Finagle’s law of dynamic negatives (a somewhat lesser-known derivative of Murphy’s law) postulates that ‘anything that can go wrong, will – at the worst possible moment’. This seems to have held true with respect to the covid-19 outbreak from a global perspective. The pandemic hit during an era of increased scepticism in science, a decline of democracy and a rise of authoritarianism, a flare-up of big-power rivalry, and waning multilateralism. As a consequence, the response to covid-19 became a political plaything both
大流行病时期的国际法
如果说这期《华尔街日报》是在不寻常的情况下制作的,那就太轻描淡写了。当我们在2020年3月开始研究这个问题时,“2019冠状病毒病”(“冠状病毒-19”)爆发的严重性开始变得清楚。早在1月份,世界卫生组织总干事就宣布新冠肺炎疫情为“国际关注的突发公共卫生事件”(pheic),1也就是说,根据《国际卫生条例》,这是一个“特殊事件”,“通过疾病的国际传播对其他国家构成公共健康风险”,“可能需要协调一致的国际应对措施”。2 3月,总干事进一步宣布此次疫情为“大流行病”。3所谓的Finagle动态负定律(墨菲定律的一个鲜为人知的衍生物)假设“任何可能出错的事情,都会——在最糟糕的时刻”。从全球角度来看,新冠肺炎疫情似乎也是如此。这场疫情发生在一个对科学越来越怀疑、民主衰落和威权主义抬头、大国竞争爆发以及多边主义衰落的时代。因此,对新冠肺炎的应对成为了一个政治游戏
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
11.10%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: The Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies is a peer reviewed journal aimed at promoting the rule of law in humanitarian emergency situations and, in particular, the protection and assistance afforded to persons in the event of armed conflicts and natural disasters in all phases and facets under international law. The Journal welcomes submissions in the areas of international humanitarian law, international human rights law, international refugee law and international law relating to disaster response. In addition, other areas of law can be identified including, but not limited to the norms regulating the prevention of humanitarian emergency situations, the law concerning internally displaced persons, arms control and disarmament law, legal issues relating to human security, and the implementation and enforcement of humanitarian norms. The Journal´s objective is to further the understanding of these legal areas in their own right as well as in their interplay. The Journal encourages writing beyond the theoretical level taking into account the practical implications from the perspective of those who are or may be affected by humanitarian emergency situations. The Journal aims at and seeks the perspective of academics, government and organisation officials, military lawyers, practitioners working in the humanitarian (legal) field, as well as students and other individuals interested therein.
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