大流行时期的公民抗命:澄清权利和义务。

IF 0.7 Q2 LAW
Yoann Della Croce, Ophelia Nicole-Berva
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引用次数: 5

摘要

本文旨在调查和评估在2019冠状病毒病大流行背景下国家与公民之间的一种特殊形式的关系,即遵守法律及其通过公民不服从进行抗议的相关权利。我们对两起不遵守法律的案例进行了分析和规范评估,一是医疗保健专业人员拒绝上班,抗议不安全的工作条件;二是公民利用公开示威,故意无视社交距离措施,抗议封锁。虽然在许多方面不同,但两者在一个方面基本相似:它们各自的抗议者都依靠非法行动来改变他们认为不公正的政策。我们质疑医疗专业人员在多大程度上可以根据医疗专业固有的注意义务参与公民不服从,以及反对封锁和禁闭措施的人在多大程度上可以合理地进行抗议而不危及无异议公民的生命和基本权利。利用契约主义的规范框架,我们的分析使我们得出这样的结论:虽然这两种情况都符合描述性意义上的公民抗命,但只有医疗专业人员的情况符合道德上正当的公民抗命。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Civil Disobedience in Times of Pandemic: Clarifying Rights and Duties.

This paper seeks to investigate and assess a particular form of relationship between the State and its citizens in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, namely that of obedience to the law and its related right of protest through civil disobedience. We do so by conducting an analysis and normative evaluation of two cases of disobedience to the law: (1) healthcare professionals refusing to attend work as a protest against unsafe working conditions, and (2) citizens who use public demonstration and deliberately ignore measures of social distancing as a way of protesting against lockdown. While different in many aspects, both are substantially similar with respect to one element: their respective protesters both rely on unlawful actions in order to bring change to a policy they consider unjust. We question the extent to which healthcare professionals may participate in civil disobedience with respect to the duty of care intrinsic to the medical profession, and the extent to which opponents of lockdown and confinement measures may reasonably engage in protests without endangering the lives and basic rights of non-dissenting citizens. Drawing on a contractualist normative framework, our analysis leads us to conclude that while both cases qualify as civil disobedience in the descriptive sense, only the case of healthcare professionals qualifies as morally justified civil disobedience.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Rationale The philosophy of crime and criminal law has been undergoing a renaissance.Increasing numbers of lawyers and philosophers are researching, writing and teaching in the area. Lawyers who are exploring theoretical issues related to criminal liability and punishment find that they must turn to philosophy. Philosophers recognise the importance of the criminal law as a focus for both analytical and normative inquiry. The practical importance of the subject is also obvious, especially at a time when western governments are having to reconsider their rationales for criminalization and sentencing in the light of substantial changes in criminal justice systems and their social contexts. Until recently, there was no journal solely devoted to the philosophy of crime and criminal law. Criminal Law and Philosophy fills this gap, and provides a platform for the high quality work that is being done in this area. High quality content; specific and inclusive in scope Criminal Law and Philosophy aims to publish high quality articles that take a philosophical perspective on any issues in the broad field of crime and punishment. The main areas and topics include: crime and criminalization; the content, principles and structure of substantive criminal law; criminal justice and the criminal process; punishment and sentencing. The journal is inclusive in its scope: it publishes articles with a historical focus on earlier philosophical discussions of crime and punishment, as well as articles with a more contemporary focus. It seeks contributions from a range of philosophical schools and approaches, in particular both from analytically oriented philosophers and from those who draw more on contemporary continental philoshophy. Readership Criminal Law and Philosophy is becoming essential reading for academics in philoso phy, in law and in criminology who take a philosophically informed critical, analytical or normative approach to the criminal law and criminal justice. It is also an important resource for students in those subjects, and for practitioners with an interest in philosophical approaches to their practice. Through this journal, readers can access the latest thinking by the best scholars in the philosophy of crime and punishment. Editorial Board The editors, editorial board and advisors constitute an impressive, international group of leading scholars working in the philosophy of crime and punishment. They represent a variety of systems of criminal law, including systems that cross national boundaries.
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