Tagcovid19

When Contact Kills: Indigenous Peoples Living in Voluntary Isolation During COVID

Abstract During the global pandemic, people around the world are at risk of serious illness and death from contact and proximity to other people.  But Indigenous peoples, particularly those in voluntary isolation, have always faced that risk.  International organizations have relied on the right to self-determination as the primary legal grounds to justify the principle of no-contact for...

Love in the Time of Cholera

Abstract A famous novel by Gabriel García Márquez describes a love story among three actors that took place in a city in Colombia during the time of cholera.  The interpersonal dynamics that unfold in this work by a Nobel Prize-winning writer offer insight into events taking place today.  We show how the urge to romanticize emotions during a time of great social stress, as well as the desire to...

How the Law Fails Tenants (And not Just During a Pandemic)

Abstract In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, all levels of government are considering how to protect public health by keeping people in their homes, even if they can no longer afford their monthly mortgage or rent payments. The protections that have emerged thus far have been far more protective of homeowners than renters. This essay exposes how the disparity in legal protections for these two...

The Folly of Credit as Pandemic Relief

Abstract Within weeks of the coronavirus pandemic appearing in the United States, the American economy came to a grinding halt. The unprecedented modern health crisis and the collapsing economy forced Congress to make a critical choice about how to help families survive financially. Congress had two basic options. It could enact policies that provided direct and meaningful financial support to...