AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearType
Hannah Fisher GETTING DOWN TO BRASS TAX: WHY COURTS SHOULD USE EQUITABLE TOLLING TO HELP TAXPAYER-PETITIONERS IMPACTED BY COVID-19 2021 University of Chicago Legal Forum 379 (2021) Filing deadlines, and the varying ramifications for failing to satisfy them, have been a longstanding fixture of the American litigation landscape. When faced with a plaintiff who has brought an untimely petition, a court must first determine whether Congress clearly intended the filing deadline to be a prerequisite to its jurisdiction over the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  GROCER CITED $1.1M FOR FAILING TO PROVIDE OR DELAYING COVID-19 SUPPLEMENTAL SICK PAY - AGENCY NEWS Labor & Employment Law 4999680 (2021) By WK Editorial Staff The California Labor Commissioner's Office has again cited Bodega Latina dba El Super grocery stores in Southern California with $1,164,500 for failing to provide or delaying supplemental paid sick leave or other benefits to 240 workers at 38 locations affected by COVID-19. Investigators found that some workers were forced to... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Brook K. Baker HAMSTRINGING THE HEALTH TECHNOLOGY RESPONSE TO COVID-19: THE BURDENS OF EXCLUSIVITY AND POLICY SOLUTIONS 13 Northeastern University Law Review 689 (May, 2021) Abstract 691 Introduction 693 I. The Burdens of Exclusivity and Policy Alternatives 697 A. Closed Science with Siloes and Secrecy vs. Collaborative and Open Science 697 B. Clinical Trial Chaos vs. Clinical Trial Coordination, Comparative Studies, and Inclusion of Key Populations 701 C. Reckless and Politicized Product Authorizations vs. Assurance... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Morgan Chalfant Harris calls on Asian Americans to turn 'pain into action' The Hill (May 19, 2021) Vice President Harris said Wednesday that she shares in the outrage and grief experienced by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders over the past year, but urged the community to turn pain into action during an appearance at a virtual summit marking Asian Pacific American Heritage Month. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Mary Ellen McIntire, CQ Roll Call Health officials plan major research on COVID-19 long haulers No Citation Available, CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (4/29/2021); (Publication Name: CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing) (4/29/2021) The National Institutes of Health is preparing to award grants in the next three weeks to researchers studying the long-term effects of COVID-19, often called long COVID."" 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Jennifer C. Nash HOME IS WHERE THE BIRTH IS: RACE, RISK, AND LABOR DURING COVID-19 32 Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 103 (2021) On April 28, 2020, Dr. W. Spencer McClelland--an obstetrician at New York City's Lenox Hill Hospital--published an editorial in The New York Times that announced, If you planned on delivering in a New York City hospital, don't change your plans. McClelland's plea was a response to an outpouring of news reports focused on pregnant people... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Suzanne Monyak, CQ Roll Call House Democrats Push for Path to Citizenship in Covid-19 Relief CQ Roll Call Washington Immigration Briefing (2/1/2021) (2/1/2021) A group of 100 lawmakers urged House leadership to include a pathway to citizenship for undocumented essential workers in an upcoming COVID-19 relief package. 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
By Sandhya Raman, CQ Roll Call House panel seeks insight on COVID-19 impact on children CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (September 23, 2021) Experts at a House hearing Wednesday on the impact of COVID-19 on children called for the passage of legislation that would improve health infrastructure, expand the pediatric workforce and fund additional research on effects of the virus. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Emma Mendelson HOW THE FALLOUT FROM POST-9/11 SURVEILLANCE PROGRAMS CAN INFORM PRIVACY PROTECTIONS FOR COVID-19 CONTACT TRACING PROGRAMS 24 CUNY L. Rev. 35, CUNY Law Review (Winter, 2021); (Publication Name: CUNY Law Review) (Winter, 2021) INTRODUCTION. 35 I. The Bush Administration and the Broadened Scope of Surveillance. 38 A. The Law and the NSA. 38 B. The Wave of Backlash Comes Crashing Down. 44 II. National Security and Public Health Surveillance During COVID-19. 46 A. Background on the Data Changes Since 9/11. 47 B. What Does Surveillance During the COVID-19 Pandemic Look... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
William Chanes Martinez HOW TO GET AWAY WITH IMMUNITY: FDA'S EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATION SCHEME AND PREP ACT LIABILITY PROTECTION IN THE CONTEXT OF COVID -19 33 Loyola Consumer Law Review 128 (2021) The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) plays a vital role in our country's response to biological agents that threaten public health and safety. On December 31, 2019, officials in Wuhan, China confirmed dozens of cases of pneumonia caused by an unknown pathogen. Chinese officials later identified that pathogen as severe acute respiratory... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Elly Kugler, Kyra Perrigo HUD'S COLLABORATION WITH TRIBAL NATIONS TO RESPOND TO COVID-19 30 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 1 (2021) The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has a long-standing mandate to administer funding that it provides to federally recognized tribal nations in support of those nations' sovereignty and in recognition of the U.S. government's trust and treaty responsibilities. Many of these programs have been instrumental in assisting tribal... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Brendan W. Williams HUNGER GAMES: RACIAL POLITICS AND THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 43 North Carolina Central Law Review 103 (2021) The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) was established by a law signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1862, with the benign charge to diffuse among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with agriculture in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and to procure, propagate, and... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Kyra Hudson Hurricane Katrina and Covid-19: Tax Legislation When the Primary Victim Is Poor and Black NBA National Bar Association Magazine (January, 2021) (1/1/2021) The wind isn't racist, and the rain doesn't target the poor. But when hurricanes strike and cities flood, people who were already disadvantaged tend to suffer the most. On August 29th, 2005, Hurricane Katrina made its appearance in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. Within hours, the category four hurricane left eighty percent of the city... 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Libby Smith IMPACT OF THE CORONAVIRUS AND FEDERAL RESPONSES ON INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' HEALTH, SECURITY, AND SOVEREIGNTY 45 American Indian Law Review 297 (2021) COVID-19 has ravaged the United States since the first confirmed American diagnosis in January 2020. By December 2020, there were 19,663,976 diagnosed cases and 341,199 deaths attributed to the disease in the United States alone. In June 2021, a year and a half after the first American diagnosis, the CDC reported 33,283,781 total cases of COVID-19... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  IN THE MATTER OF COVID-19 TELEHEALTH PROGRAM PROMOTING TELEHEALTH FOR LOW-INCOME CONSUMERS No Citation Available (4/1/2021) (3/30/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
Kaitlyn Filip, Kat Albrecht INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PERSONAL INJURY, DISABILITY AND DEATH: THE PROBLEMS OF UNIVERSITY LIABILITY WAIVERS FOR COVID-19 PROTECTIONS 31-FALL Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 89 (Fall, 2021) On September 8, 2020, Graduate Student Instructors (GSIs) at the University of Michigan began what would be the longest strike in the forty-five-year history of the Graduate Employees' Organization (GEO). At the beginning of the 2020 academic year, hundreds of graduate instructors refused to teach. They demanded the right to work remotely... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Doron Teichman, Kristen Underhill INFECTED BY BIAS: BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE AND THE LEGAL RESPONSE TO COVID-19 47 American Journal of Law & Medicine 205 (2021) This Article presents the first comprehensive analysis of the contribution of behavioral science to the legal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. At the descriptive level, the Article shows how different psychological phenomena such as loss aversion and cultural cognition influenced the way policymakers and the public perceived the pandemic, and how... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
James Dever , Jack Dever INFORMATION AGE IMPERIALISM: CHINA, 'RACE,' AND NEO-COLONIALISM IN AFRICA AND LATIN AMERICA 52 University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 1 (Spring/Summer, 2021) I. Introduction. 2 II. China in Crisis. 3 A. The Chinese Context. 3 B. Behind the Wolf. 6 III. State-Sponsored Domestic Terror. 10 A. Hong Kong. 10 B. Tragedy in Xinjiang. 11 C. High-Tech Surveillance. 13 D. Opportunity Wasted. 15 IV. Great Power Competition. 17 A. Threat Vectors. 17 B. BRI: The Foreign Policy Vision. 21 V. Colonialism. 23 A. The... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Jordan Paradise INFORMATION OPACITY IN BIOPHARMACEUTICAL INNOVATION THROUGH THE LENS OF COVID-19 47 American Journal of Law & Medicine 157 (2021) The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed myriad and complex challenges for our national health care system spanning preparedness, response, access, costs, infrastructure, coordination, and medical innovation. These challenges implicate federal, state, and local agencies and actors, as well as international collaborative bodies. One constant throughout... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
CQ Roll Call staff Initial Vaccination Data Shows Racial Inequities CQ Roll Call Insurance Briefing (2/2/2021) (2/2/2021) Nearly 13 million people received COVID-19 vaccines between Dec. 14 and Jan. 14, but only 5.4 percent were Black and 60 percent were white, among those identified by race, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2021 Law Reviews and Other Secondary Sources
Angela S. Boettcher, Quentin H. Morse, Nora Rainey Olson Cooke, Erin McLaughlin, Caroline Young, Charissa Wood, Sasha Strong, Natasha Viteri, Taylor Schad INTRODUCTION TO THE SPECIAL ISSUE: A RETROSPECTIVE ON RACE IN AMERICA 92 University of Colorado Law Review 1259 (Special Issue 2021) On May 25th, 2020, George Floyd was arrested by four Minneapolis Police Officers for attempting to pass a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill. To subdue a nonviolent Mr. Floyd, Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on Mr. Floyd's neck. Despite Mr. Floyd repeatedly gasping I can't breathe and eventually losing consciousness, Officer Chauvin held him pinned for... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  IRS issues draft guidance on Native American COVID relief payments 6/9/2021 Articles FTWA (June 9, 2021)   2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  IS AN EMPLOYEE WHO EXERCISES EEO RIGHTS IN CONNECTION WITH COVID-19 PROTECTED FROM RETALIATION HR Compliance 8493920 (2021) Issue: An Asian-American employee complained to you about a coworker's abusive comments accusing Asian people of causing and spreading COVID-19. After an internal investigation was completed and appropriate action was taken, the employee's supervisor told him she didn't appreciate him going around her to HR to report the harassment. Since then,... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  Key COVID-19 Insurance Coverage Cases Tracker (US) 2021 Minnesota Senate Resolution No. 48, Minnesota First Regular Session of the Ninety-Second Legislative Session (4/12/2021) (4/20/2021) A table of key insurance coverage cases filed to recover losses related to the ongoing 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. The table summarizes each case, identifies the insurance coverage implicated, and contains links to each complaint and related resources. The cases are listed in reverse chronological order. 2021 No Information
  Key COVID-19 Insurance Coverage Cases Tracker (US): 2020 and 2021 2021 A tracker of key insurance coverage cases to recover losses related to the ongoing 2019 novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic. The tracker lists the cases in reverse chronological order, summarizes each case, and identifies the insurance coverage and policy provisions each case implicates, including business interruption coverage, civil... 2021 Other Documents
Khiara M. Bridges LANGUAGE ON THE MOVE: "CANCEL CULTURE," "CRITICAL RACE THEORY," AND THE DIGITAL PUBLIC SPHERE 131 Yale Law Journal Forum 767 (January 26, 2022) Scores of people have been talking about cancel culture and Critical Race Theory recently. However, what people mean when they use the terms varies wildly. This Essay examines the recent drift around the meaning of these terms, analyzing the role that the digital public sphere has played in generating these examples of language on the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Mary Louise Frampton LAW SCHOOL DESIGN FROM A CRITICAL RACE PERSPECTIVE: THE GENESIS OF THE CHARRETTE 25 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 53 (Summer, 2021) Crises often enable us to see the world in a different light and to talk more honestly about painful subjects. COVID-19 has been a calamity that has sown death and despair, distrust, and division, but it has also created the opportunity for this generation of Americans to see how racial hierarchy infects everything. For those who could previously... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Samuel Vincent Jones LAW SCHOOLS, CULTURAL COMPETENCY, AND ANTI-BLACK RACISM: THE LIBERTY OF DISCRIMINATION 21 Berkeley Journal of African-American Law & Policy 84 (2021) Introduction. 84 I. Do Law Schools Have Liberty to Discriminate Against Black Law Students?. 86 A. The Black Law Student Experience. 87 B. Law Schools and the Liberty to Foster Anti-Black Racism. 90 II. Should Law Schools Require Cultural Competency Instruction as a Means to Curtail Anti-Black Racial Discrimination?. 96 A. Cultural Competency... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Celine Castronuovo Lawsuit from Stephen Miller group alleges racial discrimination in distribution of COVID-19 relief The Hill (May 13, 2021) A legal group founded by ex-Trump aide Stephen Miller on Thursday filed another lawsuit accusing the Biden administration of racial discrimination in the distribution of COVID-19 relief funds, this time for money designated for restaurant owners. 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Catherine J.K. Sandoval , Patricia A. Cain , Stephen F. Diamond , Allen S. Hammond , Jean C. Love , Stephen E. Smith , Solmaz Nabipour, M.D. LEGAL EDUCATION DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC: PUT HEALTH, SAFETY AND EQUITY FIRST 61 Santa Clara Law Review 367 (2021) The COVID-19 viral pandemic exposed equity and safety culture gaps in American legal education. Legal education forms part of America's Critical Infrastructure whose continuity is important to the economy, public safety, democracy, and the national security of the United States. To address the COVID-19 pandemic and prepare for future viral... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Mirko Bagaric , Peter Isham , Jennifer Svilar , Theo Alexander LESS PRISON TIME MATTERS: A ROADMAP TO REDUCING THE DISCRIMINATORY IMPACT OF THE SENTENCING SYSTEM AGAINST AFRICAN AMERICANS AND INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS 37 Georgia State University Law Review 1405 (Summer, 2021) The criminal justice system discriminates against African Americans. There are a number of stages of the criminal justice process. Sentencing is the sharp end of the system because this is where the community acts in its most coercive manner by intentionally inflecting hardships on offenders. African Americans comprise approximately 40% of the... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Amanda Harris , Brittíni “Ree Belle” Gray , Ciearra Walker , Melinique Walls Castellanos LESSONS LEARNED FROM COMMUNITY-DRIVEN RESPONSIVENESS DURING COVID-19 14 Saint Louis University Journal of Health Law & Policy 429 (2021) People of color are suffering and dying from COVID-19 at greater rates than the general population. Additionally, population-level health interventions can worsen health disparities by failing to reach already underserved populations. In response, PrepareSTL, a collaborative, community-led campaign, aims to reach communities of color in St. Louis... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Yong-Shik Lee MANAGING COVID-19: LEGAL AND INSTITUTIONAL ISSUES 23 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology 1 (November 11, 2021) The spread of the recent pandemic, COVID-19--which began in Wuhan, in December of 2019--has created an unprecedented impact on public health in the United States and across the world. As of October 2021, the United States reported over 44 million infection cases and over 720,000 deaths. Those cases represent over 18 percent of the reported... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
John Bowden Mazie Hirono: Asian American, Pacific Islander community 'feels under siege' amid rise in hate crimes No Citation Available, The Hill (4/19/2021); (Publication Name: The Hill) (4/19/2021) Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) said Monday that the Asian American and Pacific Islander community feels as if it is under siege" in the U.S. amid a rise in anti-Asian discrimination and violence." 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  Memorandum Condemning and Combating Racism, Xenophobia, and Intolerance Against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States White House (1/26/2021) Search Snippet: ...The White House Office of Communications MEMORANDUM CONDEMNING AND COMBATING RACISM, XENOPHOBIA, AND INTOLERANCE AGAINST ASIAN AMERICANS AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS IN THE UNITED STATES January 26, 2021 Advancing inclusion and... 2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  Memorandum Condemning and Combating Racism, Xenophobia, and Intolerance Against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the United States (1/26/2021) (White House) (1/26/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  Memorandum to Board: Racial and Ethnic Diversity on the Board 2021 A form of memorandum to be delivered to a public company's board of directors highlighting key issues and recent developments to consider when evaluating racial and ethnic board diversity and related disclosure. 2021 Other Documents
Natalie Netzel, Ana Pottratz Acosta, Joanna Woolman, Katherine Kruse, Jonathan Geffen MITCHELL HAMLINE SCHOOL OF LAW SUMMER 2020 COVID-19 LEGAL RESPONSE CLINIC 28 Clinical Law Review 301 (Fall, 2021) This essay is a reflection on lawyering in a time of crisis. It details the Mitchell Hamline School of Law Clinical Faculty's response to the community needs resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic by creating the COVID-19 Legal Response Clinic. It also recounts the impact of the murder of George Floyd and the long overdue national reckoning with... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  MORGAN RODMAN NAMED EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF WHITE HOUSE COUNCIL ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS (May 27, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  National Security Directive on United States Global Leadership to Strengthen the International Covid-19 Response and to Advance Global Health Security and Biological Preparedness White House (1/21/2021) Search Snippet: ...DIRECTIVE ON UNITED STATES GLOBAL LEADERSHIP TO STRENGTHEN THE INTERNATIONAL COVID- 19 RESPONSE AND TO ADVANCE GLOBAL HEALTH SECURITY AND BIOLOGICAL PREPAREDNESS... 2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  National Security Directive on United States Global Leadership to Strengthen the International Covid-19 Response and to Advance Global Health Security and Biological Preparedness (1/21/2021) (White House) (1/21/2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  NEW BLOG POST BY DEPUTY SECRETARY WALLY ADEYEMO ON CENTERING AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN IMPLEMENTATION ON RACIAL EQUITY Treas. JY-0363 (September 17, 2021)   2021 Administrative Decisions & Guidance
  NEW EEOC GUIDANCE: YOUR EMPLOYEES CAN SUE YOU FOR COVID-19 RETALIATION (IF IT'S BASED ON A PROTECTED CLASSIFICATION) - EXPERT GUIDANCE HR Compliance 5907988 (2021) The latest series of Covid-19 news is discomfiting. The Biden administration is fighting in court for its vaccinate-or-test mandate. Europe, Asia, and parts of the U.S. are suffering from a heavy uptick in Delta variant Covid-19 illnesses that are starting to look as bad as late 2020-most gravely among the unvaccinated. And we continue to burn... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Breonne DeDecker, Davida Finger, Shana M. Griffin NEW ORLEANS EVICTIONS DURING COVID-19 (2020) 30 Journal of Affordable Housing & Community Development Law 227 (2021) I. Introduction. 227 II. History of the Challenge. 231 III. Current Housing Inequities. 235 A. Evictions Filed in New Orleans During the 2020 Moratoria. 237 B. Insights From Eviction Court Monitoring. 239 C. Eviction Cases by Race. 247 IV. Implications for Further Study. 249 V. Conclusion. 251 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  NEW YORK STATE DIVISION OF HUMAN RIGHTS, CORONAVIRUS REPONSES RELATED CHANGES & UPDATES 20210517P City Bar Center for Continuing Legal Education 1 (May 17, 2021) May 6, 2021 | 11:08 am COVID-19 is still spreading, even as the vaccine is here. Wear a mask, social distance and stay up to date on New York State's vaccination program. GET THE FACTS > New York State Division of Human Rights Office Operations Discrimination Relating to the Coronavirus Under the New York State Human Rights Law Temporary... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Nina A. Kohn NURSING HOMES, COVID-19, AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF REGULATORY FAILURE 110 Geo. L.J. Online 1, Georgetown Law Journal Online (Spring, 2021); (Publication Name: Georgetown Law Journal Online) (Spring, 2021) This essay explores the COVID-19 crisis in America's nursing homes and its lessons for the future of long-term care. It challenges narratives portraying nursing homes as the unfortunate victims of COVID-19 by showing how the crisis is the foreseeable result of regulatory gaps and failures that have long enabled nursing homes to engage in systemic... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
James T. Smith NURTURING THE BABY BOND PROPOSAL: HOW TAX PRINCIPLES CAN CLOSE THE RACIAL WEALTH GAP IN THE UNITED STATES 94 Temple Law Review 147 (Fall, 2021) [T]he problems of racial injustice and economic injustice cannot be solved without a radical redistribution of political and economic power. Every day I'm trying to play catch-up, said Kourtney McGowan--a Black mother from California who became unemployed after her company refused to accommodate her work schedule during the COVID-19 pandemic.... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
  OAR 333-018-0011 RACE, ETHNICITY, LANGUAGE AND DISABILITY COVID-19 DATA REPORTING (LAST EDITED NOVEMBER 23, 2021) State Healthcare Laws Library 333-018-0011 (2021) (1) The reporting requirements in this rule are in addition to the information required to be reported under OAR 333-018-0010. (2) For purposes of this rule: (a) Congregate setting means an environment where a number of people reside, meet or gather in close proximity for either a limited or extended period of time, and include but are not... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Cindy A. Schipani , Terry Morehead Dworkin , Devin Abney OVERCOMING GENDER DISCRIMINATION IN BUSINESS: RECONSIDERING MENTORING IN THE POST #ME-TOO AND COVID-19 ERAS 23 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law 1072 (2021) I. Origins of Female Mentorship: How Female Mentorship Countered Historical Systems Of Patriarchal Inequality in the United States. 1074 II. The Perception of Women in the Workplace. 1081 III. The Post-#MeToo Era Divide. 1086 IV. The Benefits of Women Mentoring Men. 1090 V. The COVID-19 Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities. 1098 VI. Conclusion.... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
Shigenori Matsui PANDEMIC: COVID-19 AND THE PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY 38 Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law 139 (2021) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 140 II. The New Coronavirus and Japan. 142 A. The New Coronavirus and Its Outbreak. 142 B. COVID-19 and Japan. 146 III. Contagious Disease Prevention System. 151 A. Infectious Disease Prevention Act. 151 IV. Immigration Control and Quarantine System. 156 A. Immigration Control System. 156 B. Quarantine System.... 2021 Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources
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