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1.
Trends Organ Crime ; : 1-24, 2021 Dec 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2322133

ABSTRACT

In March 2020, the UK was placed in lockdown following the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Just as legitimate workplaces made changes to enable their employees to work from home, the illicit drugs trade also made alternative arrangements, adapting its supply models to ensure continuity of operations. Based upon qualitative interviews with 46 practitioners, this paper assesses how front-line professionals have experienced and perceived the impact of Covid-19 on child criminal exploitation and County Lines drug supply in the UK. Throughout the paper, we highlight perceived adaptations to the County Lines supply model, the impact of lockdown restrictions on detection and law enforcement activities aimed at County Lines, and on efforts to safeguard children and young people from criminal exploitation. Our participants generally believed that the pandemic had induced shifts to County Lines that reflected an ongoing evolution of the drug supply model and changes in understanding or attention because of Covid-19 restrictions, rather than a complete reconstitution of the model itself. Practitioners perceived that Covid-19 has had, and continues to have, a significant impact on some young people's vulnerability to exploitation, on the way in which police and frontline practitioners respond to County Lines and child criminal exploitation, and on the way illegal drugs are being moved and sold.

2.
Police Quarterly ; 26(2):213-244, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2322813

ABSTRACT

Providing face-to-face support to victims entails one the most intense stress- and trauma-laden exchanges of law enforcement tasks, which frequently triggers long lasting negative effects on police officer's psychological wellbeing. When exploring this phenomenon, police resilience is often interpreted as police officers' and organization's capacity to react and recover from negative experiences and impediments, and as such it may be perceived as both a trait and a trainable and promotable skill. Yet, in very recent times, police resilience has faced new or transformed challenges due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as victims, citizens, and public institutions have encountered new needs and situations. Drawing from a unique qualitative, in-depth research with police officers that provide support to victims of gender-based and domestic violence, this paper analyzes officers' needs and challenges regarding their interactions with victims, colleagues, superiors, and other occupational demands, as they interplay into stress and trauma that may lead to burnout and compassion fatigue. Illustrated with the empirical findings of the case study of the Catalonia's Mossos d'Esquadra police corps, the paper explores how officers negotiate individuals' expectations, needs, and procedures signals towards potential challenges and threats to their psychological wellbeing with implications for police forces and other public and private institutions. The specific needs and demands of the participants' policing, related to support to gender-based and domestic violence, presents an in-depth analysis of how stress and trauma are understood and experienced from the police officers' perspectives.

3.
Construction Management and Economics ; 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2322783

ABSTRACT

In Australia, rates of suicide and poor mental health among construction workers were high before the COVID-19 pandemic. "Lock downs”, "restrictions”, "social distancing” and legislative changes responding to the pandemic have likely exacerbated the working conditions that foster poor mental health. This study analyses the way in which workplace health and safety (WHS) is regulated in Australia against the backdrop of existing research relating to the development of Australia's WHS laws, and the state of mental health of those working in Australia's construction industry. This study was conducted using a doctrinal research methodology and utilising legal theory. This study assesses the capacity of the Australian WHS regulatory system to protect construction workers' mental health by examining and interpreting key provisions in Australia's WHS laws. It then uses a regulatory theory, responsive regulation, to explain the inconsistency between the capacity of those laws to safeguard mental health and the very poor state of mental health of Australia's construction workers. The conclusion reached is that there is scope to improve current WHS laws to better protect construction workers' mental health. A recommendation is made, that current WHS laws are changed to prescribe minimum standards of worker mental health, and mandate control measures to minimise and/or eliminate psychosocial risks. It is submitted that these changes in the law will contribute to a changed culture in Australia's construction sector, which is supportive of mentally healthy workplaces and workers. © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

4.
Teoría y Realidad Constitucional ; - (51):231-257, 2023.
Article in Spanish | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2322564

ABSTRACT

Este trabajo pone de relieve cómo la pandemia causada por el COVID-19 constituye uno de tantos riesgos globales a los que se enfrentan nuestras sociedades, uno de esos riesgos que han venido para quedarse y que, por lo tanto, exigen una respuesta fuera de los estados de excepcionalidad. Se advierte también de los riesgos y la inseguridad que para los derechos fundamentales supone la dilación en el tiempo de medidas de excepcionalidad, apostando por una regulación por ley orgánica de las situaciones de emergencia sanitaria, la actual o las que podamos vivir en el futuro. La cuestión de cómo valoramos los riesgos y que respuestas reglamos con antelación para afrontarlos constituye hoy un imperativo para la defensa de los derechos fundamentales.Alternate :This paper highlights how the pandemic caused by COVID-19 constitutes one of the many global risks faced by our societies, one of those risks that have arrived to stay. That, therefore, demands a response out of a state of exceptionality. The paper also warns of the risks and insecurity for fundamental rights posed by the delay in the time of exceptional measures, and advocates regulation by organic law of health emergency situations -the current one or those that we may experience in the future-. The question of how we assess the risks and what responses we regulate in advance to face them constitutes today an imperative for the defense of fundamental rights.

5.
Human Rights Quarterly ; 45(2):171-204, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2322296

ABSTRACT

The right to property is part of International Human Rights Law (IHRL). However, the right is conspicuously missing from some fundamental treaties, and there are important inconsistencies in its interpretation by regional and global human rights bodies. In light of the indeterminacy and polysemy of IHRL in relation to property, this paper articulates a proposal to rethink this right taking Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ESCR) seriously. The proposal contains four propositions. Firstly, property is a human right. Secondly, it includes private property as one of its forms, but this is not the only one. Thirdly, property has a social function. And fourthly, as a matter of proportionality, fulfilling ESCR is one of the most important objectives that may justify the limitation of private property.

6.
Leiden Journal of International Law ; : 1-27, 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2322263

ABSTRACT

The recent Covid-19 global health crisis not only brings into sharp relief the current problems afflicting the international intellectual property regime (IIPR) but also calls into question its legitimacy as an international authority. Against this backdrop, the article aims to launch an investigation into the legitimacy of the IIPR, as an international co-ordinative authority, designed to protect IP rights without prejudice to international trade norms. Drawing on Raz's service conception of authority, it explores whether the IIPR lives up to its promises by enabling co-ordination between states over IP rights without undermining the initial balance on which it is founded, struck between developing and developed countries, as well as between international protection of IP- cum-trade rights and domestic regulatory autonomy. It does so by classifying the historical evolution of the IIPR under three different phases: (i) its foundation, (ii) before, and (iii) after the TRIPS-plus. Upon showing the legitimacy challenges inherent in its undemocratic foundation, the article points to the success of the regime in finding a balance between conflicting interests before the TRIPS-plus era. Later, it underlines the many challenges that come with linking the IIPR to the investment regime and argues that the FTAs and frequent regime-shifting activities put further pressure on the authority and legitimacy of the regime. Stressing the importance of democratic participation for the legitimacy of any co-ordinative authority, the article casts doubt on the IIPR's legitimacy and concludes by raising some points to overcome the ongoing legitimacy challenges.

7.
Human Rights Law Review ; 23(1), 2023.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2322186

ABSTRACT

While the right to health has gained significant momentum in international law over the past two years, there is little clarity on what it means for States to comply with this right in times of COVID-19. Taking Articles 2(1) and 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as a starting point, our article follows an approach guided by the rules of treaty interpretation under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties to suggest how right to health obligations to prevent, treat and control infectious diseases should be interpreted in relation to COVID-19, and how these obligations interact with general obligations of immediacy, progressive realisation, minimum core and international assistance and cooperation in this context. This article makes a novel contribution to clarifying the right to health during COVID-19, thus enhancing capacity for the oversight of this right;its incorporation in global health law;and the understanding of its corresponding obligations in future global health emergencies. © 2023 The Author(s) [2023].

8.
Teoría y Realidad Constitucional ; - (51):703, 2023.
Article in Spanish | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2321653
9.
Pacific Review ; : 1-19, 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2327154

ABSTRACT

Many China observers have commented that Beijing is harsh and assertive on diplomatic occasions. By publicizing the nationalistic rhetoric and moves in internal propaganda, the PRC aims to please domestic audiences. This article examines China's practices of 'wolf-warrior diplomacy', explicates the rationale behind it, and provides three plausible explanations. Firstly, the individualist explanation highlights the personal motives of 'wolf-warrior' diplomats. However, wolf-warrior diplomacy is not the common practice of Chinese diplomats, as most Chinese diplomats, unlike these wolf-warriors, remain conservative, taking an orthodox approach to their duties. Secondly, the institutional explanation presents a potential conflict between propaganda and diplomacy agencies in conducting waixuan (external propaganda, overseas-targeted propaganda: (sic)(sic)). I elaborate on how the changing working doctrines of waixuan have encouraged wolf-warrior diplomacy. Finally, the strategic explanation highlights how Beijing diverts the popular attention away from its domestic issues and towards 'external threats' and rallies popular support at home by 'talking tough' and 'blaming others'. The diversionary use of assertive diplomacy also allows Beijing to avoid publicizing its policy failures, buy more time and room for manoeuvre, and plan tactical reforms while preserving its fundamental political system. I also argue that the wolf-warrior diplomacy is more of ad hoc response to perceived geopolitical risk in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic than a well-crafted strategy.

10.
Current Pharmacology Reports. ; 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2326942

ABSTRACT

Purpose of overview: The constant surge in accessing essential medicines creates a greater need for continuous monitoring of usage. The inability to source active pharmaceutical ingredients during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in drug shortages that increased online requests for medications. E-commerce and social sites have opened the floodgate for the marketing of falsified, substandard, and unregistered pharmaceuticals, making them easily accessible to consumers with the click of a button. A high prevalence of such products with compromised quality highlights further the need for enhanced post-marketing vigilance of safety and quality within the pharmaceutical industry. This review aims to assess the extent to which pharmacovigilance (PV) systems in selected Caribbean countries conform to the minimum World Health Organization (WHO) requirements, highlight the importance of PV in ensuring the safer use of medicines across the Caribbean region, and identify opportunities and challenges in building comprehensive PV systems. Recent Findings: The review finds that while major advancements in PV and adverse drug reaction (ADR) monitoring have occurred in Europe and other parts of the Americas, little has been done in the Caribbean region. Only a few countries in the region are active members of the WHO's global PV network, and ADR reporting is minimal. The reason for low reporting includes a lack of awareness, commitment, and participation of healthcare professionals, manufacturers, authorized distributors, and the general consumers. Summary: Nearly all established national PV systems do not fully conform to the minimum PV requirements by the WHO. Legislation, regulatory framework, political commitment, adequate funding, strategies, and incentives to encourage reporting of ADRs are needed to build sustainable PV systems in the Caribbean.Copyright © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

11.
German Law Journal ; 24(3):603-617, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2326897

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic elicited a surge in the use of digital tools to replace "classic” manual disease tracking and contact tracing across individuals. The main technical reason is based on the disease surveillance needs imposed by the magnitude of the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus since 2020, particularly how these needs overwhelmed governments around the world. Such developments led to stark variations across countries in terms of legal approaches towards the use of digital tools, including self-reporting software and mobile phone apps, for both disease tracking and contact tracing. Against this backdrop, in this article I highlight some of the normative challenges posed by the digitalization of disease surveillance, underscoring its almost non-existent regulation under international law. I look back at the historical emergence of the epidemiological principles underlying this procedure, by referring to John Snow's trailblazing work in cholera control. I emphasize how the COVID-19 pandemic prompted both technical and normative shifts related to the digitalization of these procedures. Furthermore, I refer to some of the overarching obstacles for deploying international law to tackle future tensions between the public health rationale for digitalized disease tracking and contact tracing, on the one hand, and normative concerns directly related to their legality, on the other hand. Lastly, I put forward conclusions in light of the current juncture of international health law reforms, and how they so far display limited potential to herald structural changes concerning the legality of the use of digital tools in disease surveillance.

12.
European Business Organization Law Review ; 24(2):201-205, 2023.
Article in English | Academic Search Complete | ID: covidwho-2326836

ABSTRACT

Bail-outs by way of loan have a similar effect (on the debtor: plainly, the cost of delivering relief is allocated differently as between a bail-out and a bail-in) in that they enable the debtor to meet current fixed costs through borrowing, in effect swapping shorter-term liabilities with a longer-term liability. The authors acknowledge the support of the Oxford Law Faculty in funding the Conference "Corporate Restructuring Laws Under Stress" (St Hugh's College, Oxford, 10 October 2022) at which the papers in this special issue were first presented, and the support of the Covid-19 Research Response Fund at Oxford University, which provided funding for the wider project of which the Conference formed one part. Most authors, however, express some concerns in relation to Covid-19 bail-out design, and in particular query whether some bail-outs may have been too generous. [Extracted from the article] Copyright of European Business Organization Law Review is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)

13.
Calitatea ; 23(191):100-106, 2022.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2326774

ABSTRACT

The aims of this research is to know the protection of float funds in the regulation of the payment system in Indonesia and how to optimize the protection of float funds in order to mitigate insolvency risk. This research will examine the regulation relating to float funds, which has seen tremendous expansion in recent years. However, until today, the float fund does not yet have an optimum protection to mitigate risk of insolvency. Therefore the urgency of the protection of float fund through an update of regulation should be of concern, that is the necessity of insured protection towards float fund, as well as regulation on the use of float funding investment returns. This research is descriptive analytic and uses normative juridical approach by prioritizing the analysis of secondary data in the form of primary source of law that is laws and regulations;secondary source of law such as journals and other previous research;and tertiary source of law. Next, the received data is analyzed qualitatively and juridical. The conclusion of this research are by regulation, the protection of float fund has not been conducted optimally, a concrete effort is needed from the regulator to optimize the protection of float fund to mitigate the risk of failure of payment due to insolvency by insurance protection, and regulation on the use of float fun investment returns.

14.
International Journal of Emerging Markets ; 2023.
Article in English | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2326402

ABSTRACT

PurposeThis study aims to examine the effects of dialect connectedness between the chairman and the chief executive officer (CEO) (DCCC) on the tunneling activities of controlling shareholders.Design/methodology/approachThis study uses abnormal related-party transactions (ARPT) as a proxy for tunneling activities and traces dialects of chairmen and CEOs based on the respective birthplace information. Baseline results are examined using a fixed-effects model. The results remain robust when using the instrumental variable approach, propensity score matching (PSM) technique, changing the measurement of tunneling and Heckman two-step selection model.FindingsThe results show that DCCC reduces tunneling activities. This negative association is more pronounced for non-state-owned enterprises and firms whose chairmen and CEOs work in the respective hometowns. DCCC restrains tunneling activities through mechanisms by establishing an informal supervisory effect on CEOs because the CEOs fear reputational damage and strengthening cooperation between chairmen and CEOs. Further analyses suggest that this negative association is more significant when chairmen and CEOs are non-controlling shareholders, but the association is weakened during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis.Originality/valueAs dialect is a carrier of culture, this study's results imply that cultural proximity can replace formal mechanisms to enhance corporate governance.

15.
Open Access Macedonian Journal of Medical Sciences ; Part E. 11:1-6, 2023.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2326323

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the search for innovative methods to improve the quality and efficiency of health services, integrated clinical pathways (ICPs) have been introduced. AIM: As there is a gap in research on ICP efficiency, the aim of the study was to investigate the role and impact of collaboration and communication among three interprofessional ICP teams on the self-assessment of efficiency of ICPs. METHOD(S): A cross-sectional study was conducted using a descriptive quantitative with a survey (n = 152) and qualitative methods with a focus group (n = 27) and in-depth interviews (n = 22) in a typical general hospital in Slovenia. RESULT(S): The results showed that health-care professionals found patient health care and the work of healthcare professionals' better quality with ICP than without ICP. The ICPs team members assessed communication, cooperation, and effectiveness in the ICP team as relatively good but identified the lack of staff as the main reason for their limitations. The impact of ICP team collaboration and communication on ICP safety exists but it does not explain a sufficient proportion of the variance and the corelation is medium strong. The result also revealed that the COVID-19 pandemic did not primarily affect ICP team members' fear of possible infection, as studies have shown in the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, but rather staff shortages leading to increased fear of errors and possible complaints and lawsuits from patients and relatives. CONCLUSION(S): Measures are needed for the additional employment of team members and the retention of current staff through financial compensation and the promotion of supportive workplace characteristics.Copyright © 2023 Mateja Simec, Sabina Krsnik, Karmen Erjavec.

16.
The Qualitative Report ; 28(5):1548-1563, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2326141

ABSTRACT

Stakeholder and consumer participation is generally seen as a critical part of effective alcohol policy making as it has a direct impact on policy implementation. In the advent of COVID-19, the views and experiences of stakeholders and consumers were integral to how countries responded to the virus. The involvement of alcohol stakeholders and consumers raises critical questions about policy making practices. Using Grounded Theory (GT) methods amongst 20 drinkers and six alcohol stakeholders, I examined the views and experiences of stakeholders and alcohol consumers in Botswana during COVID-19. I identified two interrelated core categories of Balancing the Drinking Act and Problematic Youth Drinking that were prominent as the country dealt with the COVID-19 pandemic. First, I argue that balancing the drinking act suggests the need for government to balance alcohol regulation with the needs of drinkers. Second, I highlight that problematic youth drinking relates to an emerging yet consistent belief that young people in Botswana are collectively responsible for alcohol "problems." These key themes center consumer and stakeholder participation in alcohol policy development. Moreover, the current analysis demonstrates the interplay between alcohol use and prohibition during COVID-19, and how it might be mediated by cultural scripts used by consumers and stakeholders in Botswana.

17.
Rivista Di Filosofia Del Diritto-Journal of Legal Philosophy ; 11(2):319-338, 2022.
Article in Italian | Web of Science | ID: covidwho-2325842

ABSTRACT

The outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 uncovered a systemic deficit of care that renewed the feminist debate on social reproduction and unpaid gendered work. In contrast to other concepts developed by the feminist critique, the discussion on social reproduction has had a limited impact on law and legal studies. The article examines the reasons for this limited impact and shows how, inter alia, social reproduction processes complicate perspectives on women's unpaid work, externalization of care, informal labour and exploitation. A number of documents on the gendered impact of the pandemic issued by international institutions are used in the article as entry points for discussion and to map out a possible research agenda on social reproduction and law.

18.
Land Use Policy ; 131:106739, 2023.
Article in English | ScienceDirect | ID: covidwho-2325758

ABSTRACT

Establishing the environmental rule of law has been identified as a precondition to achieving sustainable development. Increasingly however norms around environmental sustainability are being eroded by rising neoliberalism. Within countries, especially developing countries these trends are creating tensions for environmental policy-making that often require adjudication/judicial intervention. In this paper, we use the case of the National Green Tribunal (NGT), situated in a rising economy - India to understand how it operates amidst these tensions, restricting our analysis to pre-COVID-19 to minimise confounding effects of the pandemic. We find that the limited jurisdiction allows the NGT to continue to uphold the principles of environmental sustainability. The NGT is able to serve as an indicator of the kinds of environmental issues cropping up, deliver environmental justice and improve governance. However, there are visible tensions driven by the larger political economy of environmental policymaking in India that pose a significant systemic challenge to the effectiveness of the NGT. Given the resurgence of economic imperatives in post-pandemic policymaking, the NGT and other similar environmental courts/tribunals across the globe, need to draw on sources of strength established pre-pandemic to uphold environmental rule of law going forward.

19.
Anuario Mexicano de Derecho Internacional ; 23:251-281, 2023.
Article in Portuguese | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2325630

ABSTRACT

The debate on the relationship between business and human rights has gradually grown in institutional and doctrinal terms, as well as the recognition that mechanisms to promote the social responsibility of these private actors are lacking. In this context, this study investigates the limits and possibilities of the corporate social responsibility (CSR) of transnational pharmaceutical companies for the unequal access to essential medicines in the global South, a reality aggravated in pandemic contexts such as HIV/AIDS and COVID-19. To this end, it discusses the actors, factors and processes of global health governance and debates some CSR strategies in the light of those elements. Methodologically, the study makes a review of the specialized literature, document and primary data analysis and conducts a normative approach of the topic. © 2023 Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. All rights reserved.

20.
Journal of Homeland Security Education ; 16:1-9, 2023.
Article in English | ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-2325543

ABSTRACT

Democracy has increasingly come under pressure as democratic norms are being eroded. This article explores why democratic processes are at risk in Europe and the United States and what might replace them. It reflects the thinking of the Study Group on Democracy convened under the auspices of the International Association for Intelligence Education in 2022. Its deliberations identified a set of underlying key drivers, documented how they manifested, and speculated on what new forms of governance might replace democratic rule. Recent trends cited include the corruption of norms, the disruptive influence of social media, the growing diversity of society, the shift from community-based problem-solving to reliance on identity politics, the emergence of existential threats, and the need for strong leadership. The group concludes that prospects for sustaining democratic institutions can best be understood by viewing future trends along two perspectives: the complexity of society and modes of decision-making.

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