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1.
Victims & Offenders ; 18(5):862-888, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20240868

ABSTRACT

Based on a participatory study design, this article describes how a group of family members of people deprived of liberty (PDL) experienced the COVID-19 control measures implemented in Mexico's prisons. We conducted 28 in-depth interviews and analyzed them using ATLAS.ti. We found that the measures implemented in Mexican prisons to avoid the spread of COVID-19 focused mainly on suspension of visitation and PDL confinement. The isolation imposed on PDL impacted their living conditions, making them more vulnerable to contracting COVID-19 due to lack of access to essential services, food, and hygiene supplies. Visit restrictions and PDL isolation also impacted PDL relatives' health and socioeconomic conditions. Our findings indicate that the consequences of COVID-19 control actions in Mexican prisons differ according to the gender and jurisdiction of PDL. Women in federal prisons were more isolated, while those in local ones were more deprived of basic supplies. Imprisoned women's isolation has especially severe effects on the mental and physical health of their elderly parents and children. The results show how the measures adopted to control COVID-19 outbreaks in Mexican prisons have exacerbated the preexisting systemic violence experienced by PDL and their families and how they have failed to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in these settings. These findings provide support for the health-informed penal reform of Mexican prisons.

2.
Columbia Law Review ; 123(3):761-803, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-20240336

ABSTRACT

The effects of the pandemic have shed light on the evolution of technology in the legal space, including the use of technology in videoconferencing proceedings and facilitating court procedures. Despite the benefits associated with technology, the rapid adoption of videoconferencing proceedings in courts may have unprecedented impacts on the relevance and practicality of the forum non conveniens doctrine. Additionally, the drastically different approaches that federal courts have taken in response to the disproportionate geographic effects of the pandemic may give way to forum shopping. Plaintiffs may be more incentivized to bring their cases to forums that allow for videoconferencing proceedings as a strategic way to circumvent a defendant's potential forum non conveniens argument in a motion to dismiss. This Note argues that videoconferencing technology allows courts to effectively transcend the restrictions of geography while mitigating arguments about the relative convenience of different forums. Creating more uniform rules for videoconferencing proceedings will ensure easier predictability and uniformity in the forum non conveniens analysis. Specifically, this Note recommends that Congress and the courts mandate standardized technological videoconferencing requirements and adopt the original understanding of the forum non conveniens doctrine for lower courts to more explicitly consider the benefits of technology when making a forum non conveniens determination.

3.
The International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy ; 43(3/4):384-401, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2324949

ABSTRACT

PurposeBuilding on perspectives from the study of multilevel governance, migrants' inclusion and emergency management, this article asks how differences across national regulations for foreign residents, work eligibility and access to national emergency supports intersected with local approaches in responding to migrants.Design/methodology/approachThis article examines national policy adjustments and parallel subnational governance early in the pandemic for three groups of foreign residents: international students, technical interns and co-ethnics with long-term visas, primarily Brazilians and Peruvians. It uses Japanese-language documents to trace national policy responses. To grasp subnational governance, the article analyzes coverage in six Japanese regional newspapers from northern, central and western Japan, for the period of April 1 to October 1, 2020.FindingsNational policies obstructed or enabled migrants' treatment as members of the local community but did not dictate this membership, which varied according to migrant group. Migrants' relationship to the community affected available supports.Originality/valueThe article brings together perspectives on multilevel governance, emergency management and migrants' inclusion. It exposes how different migrant groups' ties to the local community affected access to supports.

4.
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies ; 29(2):1-25, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2293561

ABSTRACT

The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has tested the response capacity of the international community. This article analyses the due diligence principle and the various international legal instruments that restate it in an assessment of the possible actions that states could have taken to avoid or, at least, contain the initial outbreak of the pandemic.

5.
NeuroQuantology ; 20(12):1832-1843, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2291708

ABSTRACT

Consumers during this spread of the COVID-19 pandemic continue to believe in the concept of "˜prevention is better than cure'. However, the preventive measure adopted varies from the traditional method where the latter resort to consuming healthy food in its original form and the earlier consumes so called healthy supplementary products that has intervention of new technology. Consumers lose clarity in understanding the method, composition, and components of health supplement items as the supplements sector expands with new inventions and advances in technology. This is made worse by deceiving marketing strategies adopted by the producer. The bold act of the producer in claiming that their product may cure serious diseases is not only unethical, but it is also a crime. Government of different jurisdictions adopts various monitoring measure to protect the rights of the consumer. In addressing this issue, this study aims at analysing the legal framework in selected jurisdictions that includes Singapore, Australia and United States of America with a view of identifying the best practices and proposing an effective legal framework. The study uses qualitative methods incorporating critical analysis on the legal framework of the selected jurisdiction. The area that is analysed consist of the accepted definition (to date this has become the main issue in regulating supplementary products), the registration process, the governing authority, and the post-registration monitoring. The analysis of data gathered through qualitative methods entails content analysis, which is supplemented by semi-structured interviews with respondents who were purposefully chosen. The findings to the study disclose the strength and weaknesses of the Malaysian legal framework that can be remedied by learning from the selected jurisdiction method. The output of this study may assist the government, policymaker, industry players and the consumer in reforming the protection of consumers to the supplementary products.

6.
Public Contract Law Journal ; 52(2):193-227, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2291236

ABSTRACT

Dep'ts and Agencies (Jan. 05, 2021), https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/01 /M-21-11.pdf 226 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19), USAID (Mar. 21, 2020), https:/ www.usaid.gov/coronavirus [http://web.archive.org /web/20200321032153] 217 U.S. Gov't Accountability Off., GAO-12-331G, Government Auditing Standards (2018) 218 OTHER AUTHORITIES Advice on the Use of Masks in the Community, During Home Care, and in Health Care Settings in the Context of COVID-19, WHO (Mar. 19, 2020), https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/331493 /WHO-2019-nCoV-IPC_Masks-2020.2-eng.pdf?sequence= 14&isAllowed=y 218 Amindeh Blaise Atabong, In Cameroon, Face Masks Are Compulsory-But Unaffordable for Many, Mail & Guardian (Apr. 18, 2020), https:// mg.co.za/article/2020-04-18-in-cameroon-face-masks-are -compulsory-but-unaffordable-for-many 217, 218 Cost of Living in Yaounde, Numbeo, https://www.numbeo.com/cost -of-living/in/Yaounde-Cameroon (last visited Mar. 5, 2021) 218 Fadela Chaib, Shortage of Personal Protective Equipment Endangering Health Workers Worldwide, WHO (Mar. 02, 2020), https://www .who.int/news/item/03-03-2020-shortage-of-personal-protective -equipment-endangering-health-workers-worldwide 217 How COVID-19 Spreads, CDC (last updated Oct. 28, 2020), https:// www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/how -COVID-spreads.html. 216 How Much Water Do You Use at Home?, U.S. Geological Surv. (last visited Mar. 5, 2021), https://water.usgs.gov/edu/activity -percapita.php 218 Scott S. Sheffler, A Reasoned Case for a "Grant Disputes Act," 47 Pub. L.J. 209 (2018) 207 STATEMENT OF RELATED CASES Pursuant to Rule 47.5 of the Federal Circuit Rules of Practice, Democracy Worldwide is unaware of another appeal in or from the same civil action or proceeding in the lower court or body that was previously before this Court or another appellate court. In November 2019, the Center of Excellence on Democracy, Human Rights, and Governance, which is part of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), published a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), announcing that USAID had $8,000,000 for human rights programming awards to increase protection for human rights defenders in Central Africa. Democracy Worldwide proposed a program to support human rights defenders in Cameroon by strengthening the normative frameworks and institutional architecture that would help Cameroon respect its human rights obligations and by building the capacity of civil society actors to promote those rights, monitor compliance, and demand accountability.

7.
American Journal of Public Health ; 113(5):463-464, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2303963

ABSTRACT

Smallpox Immunization in Colonial America: All Too Relevant Today The Contagion of Liberty: The Politics of Smallpox in the American Revolution By Andrew Wehrman Baltimore, MD:Johns Hopkins Press;2022 Hardcover: 401 pp;$32.00 ISBN-10: 1-4214-4466-6 ISBN-13: 978-1-4214-4466-6

8.
Public Contract Law Journal ; 52(2):229-246, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2301898

ABSTRACT

Whether the U.S. Court of Federal Claims ("Court of Federal Claims" or "lower court") has subject matter jurisdiction over appellant's claim for a right to cost reimbursement under a United States Agency for International Development ("USAID") grant award that did not contain a money-mandating provision and consideration. 2. [...]the Court of Federal Claims erroneously analogized the grant award to a traditional procurement contract. Because of this errant comparison, the lower court's analysis is flawed, and so, DW's claim falls outside the narrow grant of jurisdiction at the Court of Federal Claims. [...]this court should reverse the lower court's holding and dismiss DW's claim in its entirety. [...]because of the fixed-price nature of the grant, DW assumed the risk of incurring costs not included in its budget.

9.
Irish Studies in International Affairs ; 32(2):225-246,271-277, 2021.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2300993

ABSTRACT

The relationship between politics and public health is increasingly evident as governments throughout the world vary in their acceptance and implementation of technical guidance in the response to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. This paper reports a qualitative study of public health policies for CoviD-19 in Northern Ireland (NI) and the Republic of Ireland (RoI) across a timeline emphasising the first wave of the pandemic (February to June 2020). Inter-jurisdictional commitments for health as contained in the Good Friday Agreement provide a framework for cooperation and coordination of population health on the island of Ireland. This study of north-south cooperation in the response to CoviD19 applies ten indicators from the Oxford CoviD-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) codebook to establish if cooperation and policy alignment of key public health measures are evident in the Northern Ireland Assembly and Government of Ireland responses. The study concludes that notwithstanding the historical and constitutional obstacles to an all-island response to CoviD-19, there is evidence of significant public health policy alignment brought about through ongoing dialogue and cooperation between the health administrations in each jurisdiction over the course of the first wave of the pandemic.

10.
Canadian Journal of Law and Society ; 35(4), 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2294960

ABSTRACT

The Tŝilhqot'in Nation has had ample experience exercising its laws and jurisdiction to manage emergencies during record-breaking wildfires and the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the Nation's unique opportunity to formally describe and advance its jurisdiction through its landmark Aboriginal title declaration and beyond, in these crises, Crown actors have defaulted to well-worn patterns of colonialism. Through a detailed analysis of recent Tŝilhqot'in experiences of emergency, we argue that provincial and federal responses to these extreme events reveal constitutional habits: patterns of decision-making that emerge in the immediate response to an emergency, so as to appear automatic. Crown emergency responses assume exhaustive Crown jurisdiction and its corollary erasure and dispossession of Tŝilhqot'in jurisdiction. Fortunately, however, habits can change. We show how Tŝilhqot'in responses to emergency reveal alternate constitutional possibilities: habits of coordination, which, through their attention to responsible relationships, build capacity to respond to emergencies and, more broadly, a changing world. © 2023 The Author(s).

11.
Policing ; 46(1):194-208, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2275543

ABSTRACT

PurposeThe purpose of the current study was to augment the police culture and stress literature by empirically examining the impact of features of the internal and external work environment, as well as officer characteristics, on police officer stress.Design/methodology/approachThe current empirical inquiry utilized survey data collected from street-level officers in a mid-sized urban police department in a southern region of the United States (n = 349).FindingsThis study revealed that perceived danger, suspicion of citizens and cynicism toward the public increased police occupational stress, while support from supervisors mitigated it. In addition, Black and Latinx officers reported significantly less stress than their White counterparts.Research limitations/implicationsWhile this study demonstrates that patrol officers' perceptions of the external and internal work environments (and race/ethnicity) matter in terms of occupational stress, it is not without limitations. One limitation related to the generalizability of the findings, as results are gleaned from a single large agency serving a metropolitan jurisdiction in the Southeast. Second, this study focused on cultural attitudes and stress, although exact connections to behaviors are more speculative. Finally, the survey took place prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and the killing of George Floyd (and others), which radically shook police–community relationships nationwide.Practical implicationsPolice administrators should be cognizant of the importance that views of them have for patrol officer stress levels. Moreover, police trainers and supervisors concerned with occupational stress of their subordinates should work toward altering assignments and socialization patterns so that officers are exposed to a variety of patrol areas, in avoiding prolonged assignments of high social distress.Originality/valueThe study augmented the police culture and stress literature by empirically uncovering the individual-level sources of patrol officers' job-related stress. This study builds off of Paoline and Gau's (2018) research using data collected some 15 years ago by examining a more contemporary, post–Ferguson, context.

12.
Island Studies Journal ; 17(2):168-191, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2272545

ABSTRACT

Tourism has the potential to contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) agreed to by United Nations member states. For sustainable tourism to be successful, stakeholders must be involved in the process. The aim of this study is to consider the extent to which sustainable tourism contributes to achieving the SDGs and how tourism stakeholders understand and implement sustainable tourism. Specifically, the study adopted a qualitative approach and used the case study of Tobago. The data were collected using focus groups of tourism stakeholders. The research revealed that stakeholders embraced the SDGs despite a lack of understanding. They were unable to provide a comprehensive definition of sustainable tourism and their relation to the SDGs, but recognised its traditional components along with specific island features. Stakeholders more easily listed sustainable tourism practices and potential and their link to the SDGs. The barriers to sustainable tourism centred mainly on the role of the local governing body and political affiliation, dependency on the mainland, and prohibitive costs. Action is needed to facilitate broader stakeholder awareness and collaboration in support of efforts to enhance sustainable tourism and the achievement of the SDGs, where policymakers need to act as a catalyst for change.

13.
International Review of Law, Computers & Technology ; 37(1):110-125, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2270584

ABSTRACT

The Covid-19 pandemic led to a surge in the use of video-conferencing services offered by Zoom, which has continued in post-pandemic times. This paper sheds light on Zoom's contractual terms related to governing law and jurisdiction, and its applicability in Emirate and French laws. It attempts to answer the question about the circumstances in which the local courts will take jurisdiction over a dispute, notwithstanding that the parties agree that such disputes will be resolved in the jurisdiction stated in the clause. It also provides an analysis of the exclusion and limitation of Zoom's liability clause. Specifically, it looks at the effectiveness of the limitation of Zoom's liability in Emirate and French laws. The study emphasizes the need for policy and legislative framework to address this new area of law and technology to protect users from contractual terms in e-services agreements since video conferencing services continue to thrive and drive growth in the post-pandemic world.

14.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine ; 80(Suppl 1):A103, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2270155

ABSTRACT

IntroductionCanadian Paramedic services modified infection prevention and control (IPAC) practices in response to COVID-19. These changes may affect risk of exposure to infectious disease agents and can be used to inform future IPAC practices. We characterized COVID-19-related IPAC changes in the provinces of Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Ontario, and Saskatchewan.Materials & MethodsQuestionnaire data (January 2021-Feb 2022) from the national COVID-19 Occupational Risks, Seroprevalence and Immunity among Paramedics (CORSIP) project was used to identify which IPAC practices were in place prior to COVID-19, and which were modified in response to COVID-19, including the timing of changes (March-May 2020;June-Aug 2020;Sept-Nov 2020;Nov 2020-present).Results2939 participants were included (146, 1249, 139, 1317, 88 from Alberta, BC, Manitoba, Ontario, and Saskatchewan, respectively), of whom 2674 (91%) reported receiving IPAC training. IPAC measures that were common prior to COVID-19 included: personal protective equipment (PPE) training, patient screening, hand hygiene, N95/P100 respirators, gowns, impermeable suits, and cleaning/disinfection. COVID-related IPAC changes included: screening staff, social distancing, restricting aerosol generating procedures, masking patients, cloth face coverings, surgical masks, face shields, and elastomeric respirators. Changes were reported for all IPAC measures. Most (71%) of these changes were made early in the COVID-19 pandemic (March-May 2020). Differences in proportions across provinces, community practice settings, and professional regulation status were reported (p < .05) for hand hygiene, PPE training, screening of patients, face shields, and various respirator types.ConclusionCanadian paramedic services were quick to modify available IPAC measures. However, these changes were variable across provinces, regulation status, and setting for specific IPAC measures. Inconsistent IPAC measures across jurisdictions may contribute to variable risk of infectious disease exposure. An evidence-informed and nationally coordinated approach may provide more equitable exposure risk mitigation for paramedic workers.

15.
IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology ; : 1-4, 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2288911

ABSTRACT

Space medicine provides care in the most extreme environment known to humankind. The global space economy is forecast to be a $1 trillion industry by 2040. Its increased utilization will require additional legal healthcare support frameworks. We reviewed the current Canadian medicolegal framework for the capability to adapt to this new demand. Currently, Canadian physicians are required to hold a license in each province they practice. As space medicine encompasses multiple medical specialties and its practice is beyond Canadian provincial jurisdictions, we identified medicolegal gaps in the Canadian ability to provide space healthcare. Geographical licensing restrictions have caused detriment to healthcare provision in remote communities, military medicine, and telemedicine, exacerbated by COVID-19. By examining similarities and solutions from these terrestrial situations, bi-directional translational licensing solutions may be found. Recommendations for an improved Canadian licensing framework targeting provision of space medicine may lead to improving healthcare access and universality for Canadians nationwide. Author

16.
Transforming Government: People, Process and Policy ; 17(1900/01/01 00:00:0000):87-100, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2236750

ABSTRACT

PurposeThis paper aims to investigate the potential challenges that governments in the Commonwealth Caribbean are likely to face combating crimes facilitated by the dark Web.Design/methodology/approachThe "lived experience” methodology guided by a contextual systematic literature review was used to ground the investigation of the research phenomena in the researchers' collective experiences working in, living in and engaging in research with governments in the Commonwealth Caribbean.FindingsThe two major findings emerging from the analysis are that jurisdictional and technical challenges are producing major hindrances to the creation of an efficient and authoritative legislative framework and the building of the capacity of governments in the Commonwealth Caribbean to confront the technicalities that affect systematic efforts to manage problems created by the dark Web.Practical implicationsThe findings indicate the urgency that authorities in the Caribbean region must place on reevaluating their administrative, legislative and investment priorities to emphasize cyber-risk management strategies that will enable their seamless and wholesome integration into this digital world.Originality/valueThe research aids in developing and extending theory and praxis related to the problematization of the dark Web for governments by situating the experiences of Small Island Developing States into the ongoing discourse.

17.
European Journal of Political Research ; 62(1):47-69, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2235605

ABSTRACT

During a crisis, the public expects the government to handle the situation. In parliamentary democracies, these expectations are directed to the cabinet and its ministers. Cabinet ministers are expected to be highly involved in policy making under their jurisdiction and in general. During periods of politics as usual, ministers differ in their policy involvement. This paper asks whether that changes during a crisis. Based on an analysis of cabinet ministers in Israel during the first wave of the COVID19 crisis, this paper finds that ministers' policy involvement during a crisis is relatively low. Most ministers are little involved in issues outside their jurisdiction. Ministers less central to the crisis management are also little involved in issues under their jurisdiction. Ministers central to the crisis management are highly involved in introducing decisions on issues under their jurisdiction, but not necessarily in other aspects of policy making. These findings have implications for issues of accountability and trust.

18.
International Journal of Criminal Justice Sciences ; 17(1):199-213, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2226047

ABSTRACT

The current study aimed at analyzing and conceptualizing the Government Regulation number 5 of 2020 concerning Standards for Organizing Balinese Cultural Tourism and compare it with other regulations in the neighborhood countries, including that of Timor Leste. The study found that the Bali Regulation under study was promulgated to ensure the sustainability of Balinese Cultural Tourism and uphold its cultural values, natural environment, customs, spiritualism, maritime and local wisdom of the community. complementing and combining the physical characteristics of village-based tourism destinations between Bali and Timor Leste regions in order to increase tourism which was heavily impacted during the pandemic. The study made a normative and empiric legal analysis of the Bali Provincial Regulation No. 5/2020 concerning the Standard for the Implementation of Balinese Cultural Tourism and the relevant Timor Leste regulation by utilizing comparative research approach. The rationale behind this study was to find ways how to develop village-based tourism destinations on urgent basis as the livelihood of the people in Bali and Timor Leste is critically dependent on tourism. The data was collected from library resources, legislations, journal articles, and legal archives. The study found that various legislations including Bali Provincial Regulation No 5 of 2020 concerning with the Standards for Balinese Cultural Tourism Implementation encouraged equal business opportunities and equal benefits to face the challenges of changing local, national and global life amidst the pandemic. However, now there is a need to establish business quality, services, processes, systems and / or services to tourists that meet standards, business qualification requirements, human resource competencies while not overriding the smooth running of traditional ceremonial activities as an intangible cultural heritage based on the Tri Hitakarana philosophy. The findings of the study would have useful implications on the tourism business of the two sectors under study.

19.
Delaware Journal of Corporate Law ; 47(1):171-208, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2167537

ABSTRACT

For starters, he claims that this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims. The Governor argues that it is not reasonably conceivable that the plaintiffs face a threat of imminent irreparable harm given that he lifted the Challenged Restrictions more than two years ago, has no intention of re- imposing them, and has entered into a settlement agreement that resolved a federal lawsuit brought by another religious leader in which he agreed to limitations on his ability to impose restrictions on houses of worship. The Delaware cases that impose that requirement have ported it over from the tests that a plaintiff must meet when seeking interim forms of injunctive relief, such as a temporary restraining order or a preliminary injunction. [...]when a plaintiff seeks to ground equitable jurisdiction on the potential need for a permanent injunction, the pled facts must support a reasonable apprehension that the defendant will act in a manner that will necessitate the injunction's issuance.

20.
Criminal Justice ; 37(2):3-9, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2125301

ABSTRACT

[...]because of the lack of preparation, support, and services, many formerly incarcerated individuals wind up re-incarcerated. According to a BJS review of criminal history data from 34 states, 6 in IO people released from prison in 2012 were rearrested within three years. Correctional facilities serve as congregate care settings, with limited access to appropriate protective equipment and materials to maintain sanitary conditions, limited ability for incarcerated people to adopt public health mitigation measures such as social distancing, and relatively low rates of vaccination. See Craig Haney, The Psychological Impact of Incarceration: Implications for Post-Prison Adjustment (prepared for the From Prison to Home Conf., Jan. 30-31, 2002), https://tinyurl.com/yc335v5v. [...]there is often an inability to maintain a healthy lifestyle, with limited access to nutritious food, time outdoors, or physical activity, and a woeful lack of access to treatment and resources for individuals with chronic physical health, mental health, and substance use issues.

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