Reproducing crises: Understanding the role of law in the COVID‐19 global pandemic

Author:

Atiles Jose1ORCID,Whyte David2

Affiliation:

1. Sociology University of Illinois at Urbana‐Champaign Urbana Illinois USA

2. QMUL London UK

Abstract

AbstractGovernmental responses to the COVID‐19 global pandemic have generated numerous constitutionals, policy, legal, and political‐economic debates. Scholarly engagements with the sociolegal and policy consequences of the COVID‐19 pandemic have been dominated by discussion on the role of emergency powers, the suspension of individual civil liberties, the suspension of economic rules in order to guarantee economic survival, and social regulation of public spaces and of workplaces. This paper aims to explore how a critical sociolegal scholarship can contribute to a more sophisticated understanding of the role of law in creating the unequal conditions that propitiated the COVID‐19 pandemic and that might enable further crises. This introduction offers a roadmap for theorizing the limits of law, the operationalization of emergency powers and the different policies implemented by global south and north countries in response to the pandemic. This introduction is structured as follow: (1) provides a general overview of the law and society tradition and its engagement with the COVID‐19 pandemic; (2) engages with three key consequences of the pandemic, labor, and the lockdown; colonial implications; and the limits of law; (3) introduces the papers in this special issue; (4) sketches a proposal for the critical sociolegal scholarship of law and crises.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Law,Sociology and Political Science

Reference67 articles.

1. Agamben G.2021.Where Are We Now? The Epidemic as Politics trans. V. Dani. Lanham MA: Rowman & Littlefield.

2. The COVID exception

3. The COVID‐19 Pandemic in Puerto Rico: Exceptionality, Corruption and State‐Corporate Crimes;Atiles J.;State Crime Journal,2021

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