ABSTRACT

This timely collection brings together original explorations of the COVID-19 pandemic and its wide-ranging, global effects on human rights.

The contributors argue that a human rights perspective is necessary to understand the pervasive consequences of the crisis, while focusing attention on those being left behind and providing a necessary framework for the effort to 'build back better'. Expert contributors to this volume address interconnections between the COVID-19 crisis and human rights to equality and non-discrimination, including historical responses to pandemics, populism and authoritarianism, and the rights to health, information, water and the environment. Highlighting the dangerous potential for derogations from human rights, authors further scrutinize the human rights compliance of new legislation and policies in relation to issues such as privacy, protection of persons with disabilities, freedom of expression, and access to medicines. Acknowledging the pandemic as a defining moment for human rights, the volume proposes a post-crisis human rights agenda to engage civil society and government at all levels in concrete measures to roll back increasing inequality.

With rich examples, new thinking, and provocative analyses of human rights, COVID-19, pandemics, crises, and inequality, this book will be of key interest to scholars, students, and practitioners in all areas of human rights, global governance, and public health, as well as others who are ready to embark on an exploration of these complex challenges.

part 1|64 pages

Human rights during health crises

chapter 1|16 pages

‘Human rights against human arbitrariness’

Pandemics in a human rights historical perspective

chapter 3|17 pages

Human rights in times of pandemics

Necessity and proportionality

chapter 4|13 pages

COVID-19 risk communication

The right to information and participation

part 2|105 pages

Vulnerability and inequality

chapter 5|15 pages

The human (rights) costs of inequality

Snapshots from a pandemic

chapter 6|18 pages

Racial justice to the forefront

Do Black lives matter in international law?

chapter 7|16 pages

COVID-19 and violence against women

Unprecedented impacts and suggestions for mitigation

chapter 8|17 pages

COVID-19 and disability

A war of two paradigms

chapter 9|17 pages

Life and death in prisons

part 3|119 pages

Cornerstones for social cohesion

chapter 11|18 pages

A paradigm shift for the Sustainable Development Goals?

Human rights and the private sector in the new social contract

chapter 12|18 pages

The human right to food

Lessons learned toward food systems transformation

chapter 14|13 pages

Land rights in crisis

chapter 17|16 pages

Is COVID-19 frustrating or facilitating sustainability transformations?

An assessment from a human rights law perspective

part |17 pages

Conclusion