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1.
Covid-19 in Asia: Law and Policy Contexts ; : 207-220, 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1370799

ABSTRACT

This chapter assesses whether the short-term benefits of using digital technology to suppress the Covid-19 pandemic justify the detrimental long-term consequences for privacy. It addresses this complex question through an inevitably incomplete discussion of privacy data protection laws, technology design, and trust in governments and technology providers as well as cultural understandings of privacy. After outlining the technology-assisted measures in various regions in Asia, the chapter highlights major privacy concerns and looks at a number of trade-offs that emerge from the use of technology to contain the spread of the virus. These trade-offs exemplify the risks of adoption of just-in-time software technologies for public health purposes without fully understanding their impact on users and of potentially erroneous data-driven decisions and the involuntary collection of personal data. They also raise important policy questions in the dynamic and fast-shifting context of the Covid-19 pandemic. © the several contributors 2021.

2.
Rutgers University Law Review ; 72(5):1417-1433, 2020.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1226106

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has turned the nation's prisons and jails into incubation centers for the disease. Health professionals and reform advocates have called for targeted, accelerated release programs to avoid the threat of widespread illness and death. Three objections are raised to the prospect of COVID-related releases: public safety, public health, and public justice. None of these objections hold up under scrutiny. A broad, six-step program of accelerated release for COVID-19 is described. This program could serve as the basis for a new normal in the American prison system.

3.
Pacific Journalism Review ; 26(2):303-304, 2020.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-1008342
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