This page was created by Manish Tyagi.
COVID-19 and Derogation of Human Rights: A Digital Map
Participant - Brian Gran
Mentions
- https://thedaily.case.edu/freedman-fellow-associate-professor-brian-gran-to-discuss-child-trafficking-in-upcoming-lecture/
This project will apply digital tools and methods to model, study, and understand socio-legal responses to the spread of COVID-19—in particular, emergency measures that derogate from states’ human rights commitments. This moment is a rare opportunity to study human rights derogation in response to public emergencies across multiple societies over the same time period . In response to COVID-19, over twenty national governments have instituted de jure derogation, and over 100 national governments have instituted de facto derogation. These circumstances demonstrate the necessity of developing new approaches to studying derogation of human rights. National governments sometimes suspend human rights when an emergency does not exist or the emergency is long over. Derogation domino effects raise concerns for durability and legitimacy of democracy and democratic accountability.