Litigating the Pandemic
eBook - ePub

Litigating the Pandemic

Disaster Cascades in Court

  1. 232 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Litigating the Pandemic

Disaster Cascades in Court

About this book

As officials scrambled in 2020 to manage the spread of COVID, the reverberations of the crisis reached well beyond immediate public health concerns. The governance problems that emerged in the pandemic would be problems in other climate-related disasters, too.Many of these governance problems wound up in court. Businesses filed insurance claims for lost commerce; when the claims were denied, some companies sued. Defense attorneys tried to get inmates released from prison, citing dangerous living conditions. As state governments ordered closures and otherwise tried to adapt, interest organizations that had long sought to limit government authority challenged them in court. Political officials railed against litigation they argued would stop businesses from reopening. The United States, like other countries, governs partly through litigation, and litigation is one way of seeing the multiple governance failures during the pandemic.Drawing on databases of cases filed, news reports, and the websites of advocacy groups and law firms, Susan M. Sterett argues that governing during the pandemic, or in any disaster, must include the human institutions intertwined with the effects of the virus. Those institutions reveal problems well beyond the reach of technical expertise. Failures in private insurance as a way of governing risk, conflicts about the primacy of religion, government authority, and health, are problems that predated the pandemic and will persist in future disasters.

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Yes, you can access Litigating the Pandemic by Susan M. Sterett,Susan Sterett in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Law Theory & Practice. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Series Page
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright
  6. Dedication
  7. Contents
  8. Introduction
  9. Chapter 1. What Are Disaster Cascades?
  10. Chapter 2. Democratic Backsliding and Litigation
  11. Chapter 3. Courts, Meaning, and Instrumental Effectiveness
  12. Chapter 4. Tsunamis, Explosions, and Misdirecting Metaphors
  13. Chapter 5. Government Authority, Civil Liberties, and Mass Incarceration
  14. Conclusion: Courts and Accepting Loss in a Pandemic
  15. Appendix: A Note on Data and Methods
  16. Notes
  17. References
  18. Index
  19. Acknowledgments