Lessons from COVID-19 for International and Global Law

126 Aufrufe
Published
CONSTITUTIONALISM, TRADE, SOCIAL JUSTICE,
& SUSTAINABILITY IN THE AMERICAS:
Lessons from the 2020 Global Pandemic
Lessons from COVID-19 for International and Global Law

Nations were scrutinizing the utility of international law and its institutions even prior to the COVID-19 outbreak. A return to localism and parochial attitudes has undermined the global system and rule of law has been replaced by power dynamics among nations, as international adjudication, such as the WTO Appellate Body, has been crippled by the very nations that originally put these institutions into place. A global pandemic reminds us of the fragility of the global system and the need for not only better governance but also better avenues for dialogue and international cooperation among countries. What will international law look like post-COVID- 19? What are the mechanisms upon which dialogue can re-emerge? How can domestic law can better interconnect with global law and policy so that collaboration may re-emerge and find resilience for future crises?
WEBINAR SERIES

February 25
10-11am US CST; 17:00-18:00 Rome
Kategorien
Corona Virus aktuelle Videos
Kommentare deaktiviert.