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Contagion, Technology, and Law at the Limits

Edited by: Lynette J. Chua, Jack Jin Gary Lee

ISBN13: 9781509970704
To be Published: July 2024
Publisher: Hart Publishing
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £90.00



This open access book explores law, politics, and inequality in fights against infectious diseases. Guided by a theoretical framework called “governing through contagion”, the studies in this book analyse how past and present governments have tried to combat contagious diseases, such as the bubonic plague, cholera, HIV/AIDS, and COVID-19.

They examine how these governments used law and other technologies, including waste management, mask-wearing, quarantine stations, house inspections, and the burning of entire neighbourhoods, to achieve their aims of protecting populations and ensuring productivity.

Although the studies recognise the power of the state, they simultaneously emphasise the active roles of technologies and creatures, drawing attention to the often-taken-for-granted workings of the non-human in public health governance. They also consider the implications of strategies of control on marginalised communities and democratic politics. Collectively, the studies in this book bring attention to the connections between COVID-19 responses by governments and their historical antecedents, shedding light on the role of capitalism, colonialism, and geopolitics in circulating contagions and the strategies used to control them.

Subjects:
Comparative Law, Law and Society
Contents:
Introduction: Governing through Contagion: Perspectives across Time and Space, Lynette J Chua (National University of Singapore, Singapore) and Jack Jin Gary Lee (Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, USA)

Part One: Technologies of Governing through Contagion
1. British Quarantine and Telegraph Stations in the Persian Gulf, 1864–1928: Governing through Contagion, Entanglements and Enclaves, Sebastian James Rose (University of Greenwich, UK)
2. Wastewater Surveillance in Colonial and Present-Day Hong Kong: Governing through Contagion from Below, Dhiraj Nainani (National University of Singapore, Singapore)
3. Regulating Pandemic Wastes: Governing through Contagion via Disciplining Modalities, Lee Godden (Melbourne Law School, Australia)
4. Instruction and Information, Images and Icons: Governing Contagion, Social Regulation and Public Health, Sharyn Roach Anleu (Flinders University, Australia) and George Sarantoulias (Monash University, Australia)

Part Two: Inter/Dysconnectedness of Governing through Contagion
5. Intimacy, Queer Men and the Law on HIV Risk Disclosure in Singapore: Governing through Contagion at the Margins, Daryl WJ Yang (Singapore), Daniel WS Ho (Institute of Mental Health, Singapore) and Rayner KJ Tan (University of North Carolina Project-China, China)
6. The Vagrancy Law Model: Governing through Social Contagion in the Anglo World, c.
1824-1932, Christopher Roberts (Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
7. The Oregon Citizen Assembly Pilot on COVID-19 Recovery: Participatory Governing through Contagion, Stephanie Burkhalter (California State Polytechnic University, USA) and Robert C Richards, Jr. (University of Arkansas, USA)

Part Three: Governing through Contagion and Authoritarianism
8. Advancing a Politics of Social Division and Governing through Contagion in Texas, USA, Nolan Kline (University of North Texas, USA) and Nathaniel Webb (University of North Texas, USA)
9. Governing through Contagion in the Authoritarian Context and the Case of China, Mark Sidel (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA)
10. Governing through Contagion and the Limits of Law, Lynette J Chua (National University of Singapore, Singapore) and Jack Jin Gary Lee (Eugene Lang College of Liberal Arts, USA)