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Human Rights in a Pandemic

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  • A. Zhebit

Abstract

The article is focused on the problem of human rights (HRs), limited or derogated from, due to the Covid-19 pandemic. While addressing some HRs limitations, derogations and even abuses, and their consequent problems, the aim is to try to analyze policy, social, moral and personal dilemmas of HRs restrictions as well as motivations behind the types of public and social behavior, in the course of the pandemic, in response to the public measures of sanitation, social distancing and confinement, travel restrictions and social assistance, recommended by the WHO and selectively followed by governments. Learning from some old experience and deriving new lessons from the pandemic, as well as from public and social actions and reactions, the purpose of the present article is to assess whether or not public health policies in this context, implemented nationally or internationally, can promote change in the HRs paradigm in the face of the existing dilemmas and dichotomies in HRs, aggravated by the pandemic. The conclusion is that the extant HRs paradigm should be redefined to address better the political, social, economic, environmental and, especially, existential exigencies of “rainy times†, thus leading to the creation of a new universal HRs code or to harmonizing the existing one.

Suggested Citation

  • A. Zhebit, 2020. "Human Rights in a Pandemic," Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law, Center for Crisis Society Studies, vol. 13(5).
  • Handle: RePEc:ccs:journl:y:2020:id:693
    DOI: 10.23932/2542-0240-2020-13-5-13
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