Constitutions and Contagion – European Constitutional Systems and the COVID-19 Pandemic

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Cover of Volume: Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht / Heidelberg Journal of International Law Volume 81 (2021), Edition 1
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Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht / Heidelberg Journal of International Law

Volume 81 (2021), Edition 1


Authors:
Publisher
C.H.BECK Recht - Wirtschaft - Steuern, München
Copyright year
2021
ISSN-Online
2942-3562
ISSN-Print
0044-2348

Chapter information


Open Access Full access

Volume 81 (2021), Edition 1

Constitutions and Contagion – European Constitutional Systems and the COVID-19 Pandemic


Authors:
ISSN-Print
0044-2348
ISSN-Online
2942-3562


Preview:

The COVID-19 pandemic has posed an unprecedented challenge, with governments resorting to different legal strategies to respond to the health emergency. This article offers a cross-cuting comparative analysis of measures taken during first six months of the pandemic (the “first wave”) in four European jurisdictions with significantly different constitutional settlements – namely France, Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom. It explores the influence of specific constitutional features on the legal responses to the pandemic and how, in turn, these responses have the potential to reconfigure the institutional frameworks in place. The inquiry, which unfolds along the analytical categories of (i) legal basis, (ii) horizontal and (iii) vertical allocation of power, and (iv) the role of the judiciary, shows that both constitutional contexts and legal traditions play a significant role in pandemic times and are, moreover, likely to continue shaping post-pandemic governance patterns.

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