Need for Greater Accountability during Public Health Emergencies
Date: | 21 July 2021 |
Elisavet Athanasia Alexiadou - The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent responses to combat the spread of the virus generated considerable attention towards regulatory policies strategies on public health care governance in times of emergencies.
COVID-19 Vaccines and Treatments: The proposal for a waiver of intellectual property rights during the pandemic
Date: | 13 July 2021 |
Dean M. Harris - On 2 October 2020, India and South Africa submitted a request to the World Trade Organization to approve a temporary waiver of intellectual property rights for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments.
The European Social Charter in the Fight for Tobacco Control: 'Don't you forget about me'
Date: | 18 June 2021 |
Aikaterini Tsampi - The literature on tobacco control and human rights has evolved through time to pertinently demonstrate how the international human rights law machinery is a potent ally in the fight for tobacco control.
Spelen met (je) leven
Date: | 03 May 2021 |
Erik Buskens - Het lukt onze overheid niet om risico's goed in te schatten. Het begon ermee toen de pandemie nog iets uit een b-cateforie SF-film leek.
‘On the brink of a catastrophic moral failure’ – not the time to abandon international law
Date: | 20 April 2021 |
David Patterson - In January 2021 the Director-General of the World Health Organization, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, delivered a blunt message at the opening of the 148th session of the WHO Executive Board: ‘The world is on the brink of a catastrophic moral failure – and the price of this failure will be paid with the lives and livelihoods of the world’s poorest countries.’
Het leeftijdscriterium op de intensive care: ongelijke situatie, ongelijke behandeling?
Date: | 20 April 2021 |
Door de grote aantallen patiënten als gevolg van het coronavirus kan sprake zijn van absolute schaarste aan bedden op de intensive care (IC) van ziekenhuizen. Hierbij rijst de vraag: wie krijgt voorrang op de IC? Deze afweging wordt ook wel ‘triage’ genoemd.
The silent spillover effects of the Covid-19 pandemic – Part I
Date: | 10 March 2021 |
Felicia Velardo - The extensive literature reviewing the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic reveals underexplored research topics that deserve enhanced attention. In this respect, it has to be noted that certain environmental and criminal spillover effects – in particular, pharmaceutical pollution and the counterfeiting of medical products and vaccines (the latter to be addressed in Part II) – seem to have been almost neglected.
The Saga Continues - The appeal’s judgment concerning the Dutch curfew measure
Date: | 05 March 2021 |
Dominique Mollet - The main question in the proceedings concerned the legal basis of the curfew measure: are the present circumstances so ‘exceptional’ that the imposition of a curfew is necessary? If this was the case, then the emergency procedure followed by the State under the ‘Wet buitengewone bevoegheden burgerlijk gezag’ (‘law on exceptional competences civil authority’, hereinafter Wbbbg) was a permissible legal basis for the measure.
A day of court cases in the Netherlands: the first part of the Dutch curfew saga
Date: | 17 February 2021 |
Dominique Mollet - The events of Tuesday 16 February 2021 taking place in the Netherlands may make you feel as if you are watching a series on Netflix on a Sunday afternoon – it all seems very unreal. As of 23 January 2021, a rule imposing a temporary curfew in the Netherlands was imposed: between 21.00h and 4.30h only persons with legitimate reasons are allowed to go outsid
U.S.President Biden’s Executive Orders for Health Care and Global Health
Date: | 01 February 2021 |
Dean M. Harris - During his first 10 days in office, U.S. President Joe Biden took significant steps toward improving health care and global public health. On the day of his Inauguration, he wrote to the Secretary-General of the United Nations to notify him that the U.S. would continue to be a member of the World Health Organization (WHO).