Covid-19 and the law : disruption, impact and legacy / edited by I. Glenn Cohen, Abbe R. Gluck, Katherine L. Kraschel, Carmel Shachar.
2024
Online
Details
Title
Covid-19 and the law : disruption, impact and legacy / edited by I. Glenn Cohen, Abbe R. Gluck, Katherine L. Kraschel, Carmel Shachar.
Author
Edition
1st edition
ISBN
9781009265690 online
Imprint
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2024.
Copyright
©2024
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xx, 406 pages) : PDF
Call Number
Online
Summary
The COVID-19 pandemic has had an enduring effect across the entire spectrum of law and policy, in areas ranging from health equity and racial justice, to constitutional law, the law of prisons, federal benefit programs, election law and much more. This collection provides a critical reflection on what changes the pandemic has already introduced, and what its legacy may be. Chapters evaluate how healthcare and government institutions have succeeded and failed during this global 'stress test,' and explore how the US and the world will move forward to ensure we are better prepared for future pandemics. This timely volume identifies the right questions to ask as we take stock of pandemic realities and provides guidance for the many stakeholders of COVID-19's legal legacy. This book is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core. - Publisher's website.
Note
Open Access on Cambridge Core.
Formatted Contents Note
Part I: The health care system that COVID-19 encountered
1. COVID-19 and clinical ethics: reflections on New York’s 2020 spring surge
2. Patients first, public health last
3. Risk, responsibility, resilience, respect: COVID-19 and the protection of health care workers
4. Post-truth won’t set us free: health law, patient autonomy, and the rise of the infodemic
5. Structural factors related to COVID-19 disparities
Part II: COVID-19, disparities, and vulnerable populations
6. Tolerating the harms of detention, with and without COVID-19
7. COVID-19 and racial justice in America
8. Access to scarce interventions: age and disability
9. Humane and resilient long-term care: A Post-COVID-19 vision
Part III: Government response and reaction to COVID-19
10. Federalism, leadership, and COVID-19: evolving lessons for the public’s health
11. COVID-19 reveals the fiscal determinants of health
12. Legislating a More Responsive Safety Net
13. Eradicating Pandemic Health Inequities: Health Justice in Emergency Preparedness
14. The Jacobson question: individual rights, expertise, and public health necessity
Part IV: Innovation during COVID-19
15. Innovation Law and COVID-19: Promoting Incentives and Access for New Health Care Technologies
16. Addressing exclusivity issues: COVID-19 and beyond
17. At-risk populations & vaccine injury compensation
Part V: Opening new pathways for health care delivery and access
18. Telehealth transformation in COVID-19
19. Changes in methadone regulation during COVID-19
20. Reproductive justice after the pandemic: how “personal responsibility” entrenches disparities and limits autonomy
21. Abortion at-home and at-law during a pandemic
Part VI: Global responses to COVID-19
22. COVID-19 and national public health regimes: whither the post-Washington consensus in public health?
23. Mapping COVID-19 legal responses: a functionalist analysis
24. A tale of two crises: COVID-19, climate change, and crisis response
25. Vaccine tourism, federalism, nationalism
Epilogue: COVID-19 in the courts.
1. COVID-19 and clinical ethics: reflections on New York’s 2020 spring surge
2. Patients first, public health last
3. Risk, responsibility, resilience, respect: COVID-19 and the protection of health care workers
4. Post-truth won’t set us free: health law, patient autonomy, and the rise of the infodemic
5. Structural factors related to COVID-19 disparities
Part II: COVID-19, disparities, and vulnerable populations
6. Tolerating the harms of detention, with and without COVID-19
7. COVID-19 and racial justice in America
8. Access to scarce interventions: age and disability
9. Humane and resilient long-term care: A Post-COVID-19 vision
Part III: Government response and reaction to COVID-19
10. Federalism, leadership, and COVID-19: evolving lessons for the public’s health
11. COVID-19 reveals the fiscal determinants of health
12. Legislating a More Responsive Safety Net
13. Eradicating Pandemic Health Inequities: Health Justice in Emergency Preparedness
14. The Jacobson question: individual rights, expertise, and public health necessity
Part IV: Innovation during COVID-19
15. Innovation Law and COVID-19: Promoting Incentives and Access for New Health Care Technologies
16. Addressing exclusivity issues: COVID-19 and beyond
17. At-risk populations & vaccine injury compensation
Part V: Opening new pathways for health care delivery and access
18. Telehealth transformation in COVID-19
19. Changes in methadone regulation during COVID-19
20. Reproductive justice after the pandemic: how “personal responsibility” entrenches disparities and limits autonomy
21. Abortion at-home and at-law during a pandemic
Part VI: Global responses to COVID-19
22. COVID-19 and national public health regimes: whither the post-Washington consensus in public health?
23. Mapping COVID-19 legal responses: a functionalist analysis
24. A tale of two crises: COVID-19, climate change, and crisis response
25. Vaccine tourism, federalism, nationalism
Epilogue: COVID-19 in the courts.
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