Duty in the time of epidemics: what China and Zimbabwe teach us
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| Title | Duty in the time of epidemics: what China and Zimbabwe teach us |
|---|---|
| Author | Davies, Sara Ellen |
| Journal Name | Australian Journal of International Affairs |
| Editor | Andrew O'Neil |
| Year Published | 2012 |
| Place of publication | Australia |
| Publisher | Routledge |
| Abstract | In November 2002, a man with 'atypical pneumonia' treated in Foshan hospital, Guangdong Province, in the People's Republic of China, was the first known case of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). However, it was not until April 2003 that the Chinese government admitted to the full scale of 'atypical pneumonia' cases infected with SARS, two months after the disease had rapidly spread across the world with initial infections in Hong Kong and Vietnam sourced to Guangdong. In 2008, Zimbabwe experienced one of the biggest outbreaks of cholera ever recorded. By February 2009, the disease had spread across all of Zimbabwe's 10 provinces and to neighbouring countries—Botswana, South Africa, Zambia and Mozambique—causing thousands of infections amongst their populations. This article seeks to examine what duties the Chinese and Zimbabwe states had to protect their citizens and the international community from these outbreaks. The article refers to the findings of the International Law Commission's study into the role of states and international organisations in protecting persons in the event of a disaster to consider whether there is an international duty to protect persons from epidemics. The article concludes that both cases reveal a growing concept of protection that entails an international duty to assist individuals when an affected state proves unwilling or unable to assist its own population in the event of a disease outbreak. |
| Peer Reviewed | Yes |
| Published | Yes |
| Alternative URI | http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10357718.2012.692532 |
| Volume | 66 |
| Issue Number | 4 |
| Page from | 413 |
| Page to | 430 |
| ISSN | 1035-7718 |
| Date Accessioned | 2012-07-05; 2012-10-18T05:48:49Z |
| Date Available | 2012-10-18T05:48:49Z |
| Research Centre | Centre for Governance and Public Policy; Griffith Asia Institute |
| Faculty | Griffith Business School |
| Subject | International Relations |
| URI | http://hdl.handle.net/10072/47196 |
| Publication Type | Journal Articles (Refereed Article) |
| Publication Type Code | c1 |
Please use this identifier to cite this record: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/47196
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