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The Plague in Modern Times and the Role of Law
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Arthur Chaslot
Veröffentlicht/Copyright:
7. März 2012
The aim of this paper is to analyze and understand the role of law with regard to the plague in modern times with an international perspective. The paper will proceed by giving an overview of the different relevant legal regulations, studying the most recent significant cases of the plague, and considering how international law has dealt with them. Finally, this paper will attempt to address if the current international law system would be efficient in addressing the potential of massive plague outbreak and how it would be possible to improve it.
Published Online: 2012-3-7
©2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Introduction: Volume 2 of the Journal of Biosecurity, Biosafety & Biodefense Law
- Global Biosecurity and Intelligence Challenges in Policy and Law
- Endemic Disease in Afghanistan: How an Improved Biosecurity Framework Could Alleviate the Threat to U.S. Troops
- BioIntel: Leveraging Information to Prevent Biological Weapons Attacks
- International Health and Intelligence Gathering: One in the Same or Rival Factions?
- Cold Cooperation: Biodevelopment and The Legal Landscape
- Tug of War? A Jurisdictional Analysis of WHO and Interpol
- Regulatory Frameworks in Global Biosecurity Threats to Food and Water
- Public Water Supplies in the United States and the European Union: International Security Procedures and Vulnerabilities
- International Food Regulations: Susceptibility to Deliberate Contamination
- France and a Biosecurity Perspective
- International Bioterrorism Search and Seizure Issues: A Comparative Analysis of American and French Search and Seizure Law as it Relates to the Global War on Terror
- The Plague in Modern Times and the Role of Law
- Biological Weapons Convention Perspectives in Law and Social Sciences
- The Biological Weapons Convention: Creation and Problems with Enforcement
- A Survey of Priorities and Impediments for a Biosecurity Code of Conduct as a Confidence Building Measure for the Biological Weapons and Toxins Convention