Melbourne Law School Covid-19 Research Network

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Melbourne Law School Covid-19 Research Network MELBOURNE LAW SCHOOL COVID-19 RESEARCH NETWORK ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY OF COVID-19 LEGAL LITERATURE Updated 1 July 2020 Note: the annotated bibliography below is arranged A) Literature B) Organisations and C) Blogs, journals and websites. A briefer version of this bibliography, containing citations only, is available on the Melbourne Law School website at https://law.unimelb.edu.au/centres/hlen/covid-19/scholarship. The literature in Part A includes scholarship and selected professional literature and is divided into broad topics, beginning with general literature followed by specific topics. We have only included each article under one topic heading, even if it is appropriate to be listed in two or more topics. A note on the jurisdiction is included if this is not immediately obvious from the citation. We have only included literature written in English. Part B lists selected organisations with dedicated COVID-19 legal publications pages. Part C lists selected blogs or other online fora. This bibliography will be regularly updated. This bibliography was compiled by the Melbourne Law School Academic Research Service, using the following journal article databases: Index to Legal Periodicals (EBSCO), AGIS (INFORMIT), Westlaw UK Journals, Westlaw Canada Journals, HEIN, SSRN and Google Scholar. In order to publish scholarship quickly, many scholarly journals have introduced ways to fast-track publication, including a faster peer- review process, and publishing accepted manuscripts, so much of the scholarship listed is in its pre- publication form. Much pre-published scholarship is also available on open access on SSRN, which has a dedicated Coronavirus Hub for early stage non-peer reviewed research to help researchers freely share their latest research. Many journal platforms that are normally only available to subscribers or on a pay per article basis are making COVID-19 literature available on open access – some of this literature is freely available until a specified date. Links are provided in the bibliography for literature and other resources available on open access. Please contact Robin Gardner in the Academic Research Service [email protected] if you have any suggestions for additional content. For Melbourne Law School staff, the Academic Research Service can supply full text articles listed below that are not available on open access. Contents A) SCHOLARSHIP AND PROFESSIONAL LITERATURE .................................................................................. 1 GENERAL ................................................................................................................................................... 1 ADMINISTRATIVE LAW / REGULATORY & POLICY RESPONSES ................................................................. 6 BUSINESS LAW (INCLUDING FRANCHISES) ............................................................................................. 43 CHARITY LAW .......................................................................................................................................... 46 COMPETITION AND CONSUMER LAW .................................................................................................... 47 CONSTITUTIONAL LAW ........................................................................................................................... 58 CONSTRUCTION LAW .............................................................................................................................. 71 CONTRACT LAW ...................................................................................................................................... 72 CORPORATIONS LAW .............................................................................................................................. 78 COURTS / DISPUTE RESOLUTION ............................................................................................................ 88 CRIMINAL LAW & PROCEDURE / CRIMINAL JUSTICE .............................................................................. 95 ELECTION LAW ...................................................................................................................................... 117 ENERGY AND NATURAL RESOURCES LAW ............................................................................................ 119 ENVIRONMENTAL LAW ......................................................................................................................... 120 FAMILY LAW .......................................................................................................................................... 124 FINANCE & BANKING / ECONOMIC LAW .............................................................................................. 125 FOOD, AGRICULTURE, ANIMALS ........................................................................................................... 138 HEALTH / MEDICAL LAW & ETHICS ....................................................................................................... 140 HUMAN RIGHTS / CIVIL LIBERTIES ........................................................................................................ 181 INDIGENOUS LAW & GOVERNANCE ..................................................................................................... 202 INSOLVENCY & BANKRUPTCY ............................................................................................................... 204 INSURANCE LAW ................................................................................................................................... 207 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ..................................................................................................................... 208 INTERNATIONAL LAW ........................................................................................................................... 213 International Economic Law (including Trade & Investment Law) ................................................... 230 International Arbitration ................................................................................................................... 240 LABOUR LAW / EMPLOYMENT .............................................................................................................. 243 LEGAL EDUCATION ................................................................................................................................ 259 LEGAL GEOGRAPHY ............................................................................................................................... 267 LEGAL PROFESSION / LEGAL PRACTICE ................................................................................................. 268 MARITIME LAW ..................................................................................................................................... 274 MEDIA LAW / COMMUNICATION ......................................................................................................... 275 PLANNING LAW ..................................................................................................................................... 277 PRIVACY & DATA PROTECTION ............................................................................................................. 278 PROPERTY LAW / HOUSING .................................................................................................................. 292 REFUGEE & ASYLUM SEEKER / IMMIGRATION LAW ............................................................................. 298 SOCIAL PROTECTION / PROVISION / WELFARE ..................................................................................... 301 SPORTS LAW.......................................................................................................................................... 302 TAX LAW ................................................................................................................................................ 303 WILLS & SUCCESSION ............................................................................................................................ 310 B) INTERNATIONAL & REGIONAL ORGANISATIONS .............................................................................. 311 C) JOURNALS, WEBSITES & BLOGS ........................................................................................................ 315 A) SCHOLARSHIP AND PROFESSIONAL LITERATURE GENERAL Chesterman, Simon, ‘Covid-19 and the Global Legal Disorder’ (SSRN Scholarly Paper ID 3588397, 29 April 2020) Abstract: When the world restarts and the masks are put away, will the global legal order look the same? Should it? A crisis is a terrible time to make predictions about the future. But it’s a great time to rethink dubious assumptions of the past, and address tensions revealed in the present. Just within the field of international law, Covid-19 has encouraged all three. Pundits predict the death of globalization — or its rebirth. Others assert that they always knew the global public health infrastructure was fundamentally flawed, or that it was the one thing saving us from apocalypse. And, of course, there are those eagerly seeking someone, somewhere, against whom they might bring a lawsuit. So it might be helpful to sort some of the wheat from the chaff and map out what we know, what we don’t know, and where we might go from here. Dodds, Klaus et al, ‘The COVID-19 Pandemic: Territorial, Political and Governance Dimensions of the Crisis’ (2020) 8(3) Territory,
Recommended publications
  • HRWF Human Rights in the World Newsletter Bulgaria Table Of
    Table of Contents • EU votes for diplomats to boycott China Winter Olympics over rights abuses • CCP: 100th Anniversary of the party who killed 50 million • The CCP at 100: What next for human rights in EU-China relations? • Missing Tibetan monk was sentenced, sent to prison, family says • China occupies sacred land in Bhutan, threatens India • 900,000 Uyghur children: the saddest victims of genocide • EU suspends efforts to ratify controversial investment deal with China • Sanctions expose EU-China split • Recalling 10 March 1959 and origins of the CCP colonization in Tibet • Tibet: Repression increases before Tibetan Uprising Day • Uyghur Group Defends Detainee Database After Xinjiang Officials Allege ‘Fake Archive’ • Will the EU-China investment agreement survive Parliament’s scrutiny? • Experts demand suspension of EU-China Investment Deal • Sweden is about to deport activist to China—Torture and prison be damned • EU-CHINA: Advocacy for the Uyghur issue • Who are the Uyghurs? Canadian scholars give profound insights • Huawei enables China’s grave human rights violations • It's 'Captive Nations Week' — here's why we should care • EU-China relations under the German presidency: is this “Europe’s moment”? • If EU wants rule of law in China, it must help 'dissident' lawyers • Happening in Europe, too • U.N. experts call call for decisive measures to protect fundamental freedoms in China • EU-China Summit: Europe can, and should hold China to account • China is the world’s greatest threat to religious freedom and other basic human rights
    [Show full text]
  • Using the COVID-19 Pandemic to Reimagine Global Health Teaching in High-Income Countries
    Editorial Using the COVID-19 pandemic to BMJ Glob Health: first published as 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005649 on 1 April 2021. Downloaded from reimagine global health teaching in high- income countries 1,2 3 4 5,6 Salla Atkins, Ananya Tina Banerjee, Kathleen Bachynski, Amrita Daftary , Gauri Desai,7 Aeyal Gross,8 Bethany Hedt- Gauthier,9 Emily Mendenhall,10 Benjamin Mason Meier,11,12 Stephanie A Nixon,13 Ann Nolan,14 Tia M Palermo,7 Alexandra Phelan,15 Oksana Pyzik,16 Pamela Roach,17 Thurka Sangaramoorthy,18 15 19 20 21 Claire J. Standley, Gavin Yamey , Seye Abimbola , Madhukar Pai To cite: Atkins S, Banerjee AT, INTRODUCTION educate students to address health disparities Bachynski K, et al. Using The COVID-19 pandemic has changed how wherever they occur, not just in LMICs. While the COVID-19 pandemic to reimagine global health we live, work and communicate. Global health the online format offers many challenges, teaching in high- income teaching is no exception. Across universities, we believe there are ways to increase student countries. BMJ Global Health professors like us have had to quickly rede- engagement and reduce fatigue (box 2). 2021;6:e005649. doi:10.1136/ sign our courses, and deliver them virtually, bmjgh-2021-005649 even as the pandemic continues to bring new challenges every day. Out of that struggle, USE COVID-19 AS A TEACHABLE MOMENT Received 8 March 2021 Even before the pandemic, students in HICs new learning opportunities have emerged. 2 Accepted 11 March 2021 This editorial, coauthored by 20 professors have shown great interest in global health.
    [Show full text]
  • Multidisipliner COVID-19 Editör: Dr
    BURSA TAB‹P ODASI SÜREKL‹ TIP E⁄‹T‹M‹ PANDEM‹ K‹TABI TEMMUZ, 2020 Multidisipliner COVID-19 Editör: Dr. Cem Heper Nilüfer Aylin ACET ÖZTÜRK Berna AKOVA Kiper ASLAN Ali AYDINLAR Kenan AYDO⁄AN Gizem AYTO⁄U Naile BOLCA TOPAL Levent BÜYÜKUYSAL Belk›s Nihan COfiKUN Nil Kader ÇA⁄AÇ Ediz DALKILIÇ Gülay DURMUfi ALTUN Baflak ERDEML‹ GÜRSEL Alparslan ERSOY Canan ERSOY Gökhan GÖKALP Asl› GÖREK D‹LEKTAfiLI Özge GÜÇLÜ AYDIN Zülfiye GÜL Rümeysa Ayfle GÜLLÜLÜ Mustafa K. HACIMUSTAFAO⁄LU Yasemin HEPER Hakk› Caner ‹NAN Ferda fi. KAHVEC‹ Cansu KARA TURAN Fikret KASAPO⁄LU Esra KAZAK Sertaç Argun KIVANÇ Ülkü KORKMAZ Selim Giray NAK Ömer Fatih NAS Osman Okan OLCAYSÜ Barbaros ORAL Banu OTLAR CAN Gökhan ÖNGEN Cüneyt ÖZAKIN Alis ÖZÇAKIR Büflra ÖZDEM‹R Vildan ÖZKOCAMAN Rifat ÖZPAR Mine ÖZfiEN Kay›han PALA ‹mran SA⁄LIK Yusuf S‹VR‹O⁄LU P›nar TAfiAR Özlem TAfiKAPILIO⁄LU Alpaslan TÜRKKAN Gürkan UNCU Yeflim UNCU P›nar VURAL Kadir YEfi‹LBA⁄ Emel YILMAZ Aysun YILMAZLAR Pandemide hayatlarını kaybeden meslektaşlarımıza… Bu kitap onlara adanmıştır. KALPLERİMİZDELER… Bursa Tabip Odası Sürekli Tıp Eğitimi PANDEMİ KİTABI Temmuz, 2020 Multidisipliner COVID-19 Editör: Dr. Cem Heper Grafik: Naci Demiray ISBN: 978-605-9665-56-8 Bursa Tabip Odası Yayınları www.bto.org.tr e-mail: [email protected] UYARI ve NOTLAR: Bu kitaptaki bilgiler tıbbın her alanında olduğu gibi sürekli olarak yenilenmekte ve değişmektedir. Kitabın kapsamı nedeniyle aktarılan bilgiler oldukça sınırlı ölçülerdedir. İnsanların her biri, diğerlerine göre farklı özelliklere ve duyarlılıklara sahiptir. Bu nedenle buradaki bilgilerin uygulanmasından ve yeterliliğinden doğacak tıbbi ve hukuki sorumluluklar uygulamayı yapan hekim ve kişilere aittir.
    [Show full text]
  • COVID-19.UN.LIBRO.DE.TEXTO.Pdf
    1 COVID-19 un libro de texto Hugo Villarroel-Ábrego, MD Task Force COVID-19 El Salvador Producido y editado en El Salvador como una publicación independiente del Task Force COVID-19 El Salvador San Salvador, El Salvador, 30 de diciembre 2020. 2 Autor, compilador y editor: Dr. Hugo Villarroel-Ábrego, médico internista, cardiólogo y ecocardiografista. Corrección de texto y estilo: Lic. Silvia Yanira Martínez de Villarroel. Diseño y diagramación: Dr. Hugo Villarroel-Ábrego. Primera Edición: 2020. © Del autor, Hugo Villarroel Abrego, 2020 Todos los derechos reservados. Hecho el depósito que marca la ley. Portada: “Asclepius Lament… Give Them A Break”, Eduardo Alonso Villarroel Martínez (a.k.a QUALIA). Contraportada: Fotografía cortesía del Dr. Edwin Noé Escalante. 3 PREFACIO Este libro es el resultado de un trabajo constante e intenso que data de abril del 2020. Comenzó a gestarse a partir de las Boletines del Task Force COVID-19 El Salvador, un grupo de chat multidisciplinario constituido por más de 150 miembros de diferentes áreas de la Salud, que se ha mantenido activo hasta la fecha, presente en redes sociales, orientándose a labores educativas destinadas al gremio de trabajadores de salud y la población general. Con 29 boletines distribuidos a miles de personas en El Salvador y en el extranjero, webinars y presencia en redes como Twitter y Facebook, nuestro Task Force se erige como un tanque de pensamiento legítimo, apegado a nuestro manifiesto, publicado en el Boletín Número 1, de fecha 25 de abril, y que se transcribe literal, a continuación: 1. Los profesionales miembros del grupo de trabajo conjunto COVID- 19 en El Salvador (COVID-19 Task Force SV) nos definimos como un “tanque de pensamiento” que trabaja con el objetivo de crear una base de datos científicos de la mejor calidad posible durante la pandemia causada por el virus SARS-CoV-2.
    [Show full text]
  • A Multicenter Retrospective Study in Wuhan, China
    University of South Florida Scholar Commons USF Libraries Florida COVID Research USF Libraries Florida COVID-19 Research Collection publications Collections 1-1-2020 Influence of Cigarettes and Alcohol on the Severity and Death of COVID-19: A Multicenter Retrospective Study in Wuhan, China Mengyuan Dai Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University Liyuan Tao Peking University Third Hospital Zhen Chen Huazhong University of Science and Technology Zhi Tian University of South Florida, [email protected] Xiaofang Guo University of South Florida, [email protected] See next page for additional authors Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/usf_fcrc_all Part of the Medicine and Health Sciences Commons Scholar Commons Citation Dai, Mengyuan; Tao, Liyuan; Chen, Zhen; Tian, Zhi; Guo, Xiaofang; Allen-Gipson, Diane S; Tan, Ruirong; Li, Rui; Chai, Li; Ai, Fen; and Liu, Miao, "Influence of Cigarettes and Alcohol on the Severity and Death of COVID-19: A Multicenter Retrospective Study in Wuhan, China" (2020). USF Libraries Florida COVID Research Collection publications. 5. https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/usf_fcrc_all/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the USF Libraries Florida COVID-19 Research Collections at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in USF Libraries Florida COVID Research Collection publications by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Authors Mengyuan Dai, Liyuan Tao, Zhen Chen, Zhi Tian, Xiaofang Guo, Diane S Allen-Gipson, Ruirong Tan, Rui Li, Li Chai, Fen Ai, and Miao Liu This article is available at Scholar Commons: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/usf_fcrc_all/5 fphys-11-588553 December 7, 2020 Time: 13:56 # 1 BRIEF RESEARCH REPORT published: 09 December 2020 doi: 10.3389/fphys.2020.588553 Influence of Cigarettes and Alcohol on the Severity and Death of COVID-19: A Multicenter Retrospective Study in Wuhan, China Mengyuan Dai1,2,3†, Liyuan Tao4†, Zhen Chen5†, Zhi Tian6†, Xiaofang Guo7, Diane S.
    [Show full text]
  • Sample Translation by Gesche Ipsen Cordt Schnibben (Hg.)/ David Schraven (Hg.) Contents Schraven (Hg.), David Corona: a Death We Knew Was Coming Foreword 368 Pages
    a Sample Translation by Gesche Ipsen Cordt Schnibben (Hg.)/ David Schraven (Hg.) Contents Schraven (Hg.), David Corona: A Death We Knew Was Coming Foreword 368 Pages ISBN 978-3-423-26281-1 Chapter I: The Chinese Phase Missed Opportunities (January/February) China keeps discovery of the new virus secret for three weeks – The German government ignores the danger – US President Donald Trump praises the Chinese government – The WHO’s warning comes too late – The whistleblower dies Chapter II: The Italian Phase Life-and-Death Decisions (February/March) Death arrives in Germany with the carnival season – The German government delays protective measures – Trump sidelines the CDC – Virologist Christian Drosten provides daily updates to the public – Bergamo’s procession of corpses Chapter III: The American Phase Death Is Exploited (March/April) Health authorities lose track of the chain of infection – More than two million new cases in four weeks – The German government tries to make up for past failings – Trump juggles with the death count – How to stop the virus: ‘the hammer and the dance’ – Death Cruises Chapter IV: The Brazilian Phase Enabling the Virus (April/May) The new epicentres: Brazil and Russia – German politicians compete for the title of ‘Supereaser’ – New tests promise new protective measures – Virologists: the new enemies of the people – 118 competing vaccines – Fear of the second wave The 16 Biggest Myths About Coronavirus Glossary About the Authors Chapter I: The Chinese Phase dtv Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co.KG Tumblingerstraße 21 80337 München [email protected] a Missed Opportunities (January/February) China keeps discovery of the new virus secret for three weeks – The German government ignores the danger – US President Donald Trump praises the Chinese government – The WHO’s warning comes too late – The whistleblower dies * The Nobel Prize-winning molecular biologist Joshua Leder once wrote: ‘The single biggest threat to man’s continued dominance on the planet is the virus.
    [Show full text]
  • Symptoms of a Broken System: the Gender Gaps in COVID-19 Decision-­ Making
    Commentary BMJ Glob Health: first published as 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003549 on 1 October 2020. Downloaded from Symptoms of a broken system: the gender gaps in COVID-19 decision- making 1,2 3 2 Kim Robin van Daalen , Csongor Bajnoczki, Maisoon Chowdhury, Sara Dada,2,4 Parnian Khorsand,2 Anna Socha,3 Arush Lal,2 Laura Jung,2,5 6 7 8,9 Lujain Alqodmani, Irene Torres , Samiratou Ouedraogo, 10,11 2 12 3 Amina Jama Mahmud, Roopa Dhatt, Alexandra Phelan, Dheepa Rajan To cite: van Daalen KR, A growing chorus of voices are questioning Summary box Bajnoczki C, Chowdhury M, the glaring lack of women in COVID-19 et al. Symptoms of a broken system: the gender gaps decision- making bodies. Men dominating ► Despite numerous global and national commit- in COVID-19 decision- leadership positions in global health has long ments to gender- inclusive global health governance, making. BMJ Global Health been the default mode of governing. This is COVID-19 followed the usual modus operandi –ex- 2020;5:e003549. doi:10.1136/ a symptom of a broken system where gover- cluding women’s voices. A mere 3.5% of 115 iden- bmjgh-2020-003549 nance is not inclusive of any type of diversity, tified COVID-19 decision- making and expert task be it gender, geography, sexual orientation, forces have gender parity in their membership while Handling editor Seye Abimbola race, socio-economic status or disciplines 85.2% are majority men. within and beyond health – excluding those ► With 87 countries included in this analysis, informa- Received 27 July 2020 tion regarding task force composition and member- Revised 22 August 2020 who offer unique perspectives, expertise and ship criteria was not easily publicly accessible for Accepted 24 August 2020 lived realities.
    [Show full text]
  • 9780520282650.Indd Iii 18/12/15 7:59 PM Chapter Eleven
    Chapter 11 Excerpt Public Health Law Power, Duty, Restraint Third Edition Lawrence O. Gostin and Lindsay F. Wiley university of california press Gostin - 9780520282650.indd iii 18/12/15 7:59 PM chapter eleven Public Health Emergency Preparedness Terrorism, Pandemics, and Disasters Everybody knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world, yet somehow we fi nd it hard to believe in ones that crash down on our heads from a blue sky. There have been as many plagues as wars in history; yet always plagues and wars take people equally by surprise. —Albert Camus, The Plague, 1948 Terrorist attacks, novel infl uenzas, emerging infectious diseases, and natural disasters have prompted a reexamination of the nation’s public health system. The jetliner and anthrax attacks of 2001, the SARS out- break of 2003, hurricanes Rita and Katrina in 2005, the 2009 H1N1 infl uenza pandemic, Hurricane Irene in 2011, Hurricane Sandy in 2012, the Texas fertilizer plant explosion in 2013, and the West African Ebola epidemic in 2014–15 have focused attention on public health prepared- ness. In the years following the 2001 attacks, “the conceptual frame- work of emergency preparedness and response subsume[d] ever larger segments of the fi eld of public health.”1 The outpouring of resources and attention to biosecurity has supported a public health law renaissance. Perceived government failures in response to public health emergencies continue to stoke public anxiety, adding political pressure for more eff ective preparedness planning. All-hazards and resilience have become watchwords in preparedness.2 Vertical strategies targeting specifi c threats (e.g., development of patho- gen- or toxin-specifi c vaccines and treatments) remain a priority.
    [Show full text]
  • China's Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic: Fighting Two Enemies
    China’s Response to the Coronavirus Pandemic: Fighting Two Enemies Eva Pils 2020-05-25T13:03:57 Autocratic crisis management as model? In many countries around the world, the coronavirus outbreak may have increased the risk of democratic retrogression, as a result of proto-autocratic emergency responses to the public health crises unfolding in their societies. In China, autocracy is already well-entrenched. From the perspective of the Chinese Communist Party, indeed, its handling of the pandemic has been a global model teaching us that China’s governance system is better suited to deal with crises than liberal democracies with their complex constraints on emergency powers. But the reality of China’s coronavirus experience raises distinctive legal-political concerns. The Party has used its vast and concentrated power to fight not only the virus, but also domestic critics of its response, including medical professionals, journalists, human rights activists, a constitutional law professor, and citizens simply speaking up via the social media because they were engaged, or enraged, or both. The fight against one of these ‘enemies’, inevitably, has affected that against the other. To understand this correlation, it is necessary to recall how China’s public health emergency unfolded. It is now believed that the global coronavirus crisis started in November 2019, when the first infections were recorded in Wuhan, an 11 million city in Hubei Province, central China. As the dangerous nature of the new disease unfolded in the following weeks, local and central authorities came under rising pressure to acknowledge the problem; but instead, they suppressed its discussion by healthcare workers even after taking some initial measures to contain and study the outbreak.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gender Gaps in COVID-19 Decision-Making
    Commentary BMJ Glob Health: first published as 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003549 on 1 October 2020. Downloaded from Symptoms of a broken system: the gender gaps in COVID-19 decision- making 1,2 3 2 Kim Robin van Daalen , Csongor Bajnoczki, Maisoon Chowdhury, Sara Dada,2,4 Parnian Khorsand,2 Anna Socha,3 Arush Lal,2 Laura Jung,2,5 6 7 8,9 Lujain Alqodmani, Irene Torres , Samiratou Ouedraogo, 10,11 2 12 3 Amina Jama Mahmud, Roopa Dhatt, Alexandra Phelan, Dheepa Rajan To cite: van Daalen KR, A growing chorus of voices are questioning Summary box Bajnoczki C, Chowdhury M, the glaring lack of women in COVID-19 et al. Symptoms of a broken system: the gender gaps decision- making bodies. Men dominating ► Despite numerous global and national commit- in COVID-19 decision- leadership positions in global health has long ments to gender- inclusive global health governance, making. BMJ Global Health been the default mode of governing. This is COVID-19 followed the usual modus operandi –ex- 2020;5:e003549. doi:10.1136/ a symptom of a broken system where gover- cluding women’s voices. A mere 3.5% of 115 iden- bmjgh-2020-003549 nance is not inclusive of any type of diversity, tified COVID-19 decision- making and expert task be it gender, geography, sexual orientation, forces have gender parity in their membership while Handling editor Seye Abimbola race, socio-economic status or disciplines 85.2% are majority men. Protected by copyright. within and beyond health – excluding those ► With 87 countries included in this analysis, informa- Received 27 July 2020 tion regarding task force composition and member- Revised 22 August 2020 who offer unique perspectives, expertise and ship criteria was not easily publicly accessible for Accepted 24 August 2020 lived realities.
    [Show full text]
  • Making America a Better Place for All: Sustainable Development Recommendations for the Biden Administration
    Columbia Law School Scholarship Archive Faculty Scholarship Faculty Publications 2021 Making America A Better Place for All: Sustainable Development Recommendations for the Biden Administration John C. Dernbach Widener University Commonwealth Law School, [email protected] Scott E. Schang Wake Forest University School of Law, [email protected] Robert W. Adler University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law, [email protected] Karol Boudreaux Landesa John Bouman Legal Action Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship Part of the Environmental Law Commons, International Law Commons, and the Law and Economics See next page for additional authors Commons Recommended Citation John C. Dernbach, Scott E. Schang, Robert W. Adler, Karol Boudreaux, John Bouman, Claire Babineaux- Fontenot, Kimberly Brown, Mikhail Chester, Michael B. Gerrard, Stephen Herzenberg, Samuel Markolf, Corey Malone-Smolla, Jane Nelson, Uma Outka, Tony Pipa, Alexandra Phelan, LeRoy Paddock, Jonathan D. Rosenbloom, William Snape, Anastasia Telesetsky, Gerald Torres, Elizabeth A. Kronk Warner & Audra Wilson, Making America A Better Place for All: Sustainable Development Recommendations for the Biden Administration, ENVIRONMENTAL LAW REPORTER, VOL. 51, NO. 4, P. 10310, 2021; WIDENER UNIVERSITY COMMONWEALTH LAW SCHOOL LEGAL STUDIES RESEARCH PAPER NO. 21-12 (2021). Available at: https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/faculty_scholarship/2752 This Working Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Publications at Scholarship Archive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of Scholarship Archive. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Authors John C. Dernbach, Scott E. Schang, Robert W.
    [Show full text]
  • COVID-19 and China: a Chronology of Events (December 2019-January 2020)
    COVID-19 and China: A Chronology of Events (December 2019-January 2020) Updated May 13, 2020 Congressional Research Service https://crsreports.congress.gov R46354 SUMMARY R46354 COVID-19 and China: A Chronology of Events May 13, 2020 (December 2019-January 2020) Susan V. Lawrence In Congress, multiple bills and resolutions have been introduced related to China’s Specialist in Asian Affairs handling of a novel coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, China, that expanded to become the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) global pandemic. This report provides a timeline of key developments in the early weeks of the pandemic, based on available public reporting. It also considers issues raised by the timeline, including the timeliness of China’s information sharing with the World Health Organization (WHO), gaps in early information China shared with the world, and episodes in which Chinese authorities sought to discipline those who publicly shared information about aspects of the epidemic. Prior to January 20, 2020—the day Chinese authorities acknowledged person-to-person transmission of the novel coronavirus—the public record provides little indication that China’s top leaders saw containment of the epidemic as a high priority. Thereafter, however, Chinese authorities appear to have taken aggressive measures to contain the virus. The Appendix includes a concise version of the timeline. A condensed version is below: Late December: Hospitals in Wuhan, China, identify cases of pneumonia of unknown origin. December 30: The Wuhan Municipal Health Commission issues “urgent notices” to city hospitals about cases of atypical pneumonia linked to the city’s Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market. The notices leak online.
    [Show full text]