Available Formats
Pandemocracy in Latin America: Revisiting the Political and Constitutional Dimension of the Pandemic
By (Author) Pablo Riberi
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
8th February 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Comparative law
342.8
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book addresses two questions: firstly, how has the fight against COVID-19, especially the individual and collective responses of Latin American nation-states, influenced the relationship between power, people, and parliaments And secondly, does democracy take a step back and let pandemocracy replace its long-lasting meaning Adopting a global-south perspective, the book explores the constitutional, political, and institutional measures that have paved the way for several aggressive state policies in various Latin American countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. The contributions provide a detailed review of democratic decay and the rule of law impairment in many countries of the region. The book goes beyond mere observation and explores all the main theoretical elements that can enhance a more comprehensive understanding of the political and normative impact of the pandemic. In terms of constitutional design and concerning the actual behavior of political bodies, the fairness and efficacy of Latin American state responses during the COVID pandemic have not relied on civic culture, executive goodwill, or boldness on the part of the judges. The aim of this volume, therefore, is to unravel the most basic elements of a very puzzling situation. Multidisciplinary perspectives are deployed to figure out how democratic standards and goals have been reshaped by nuanced constructions of some atavistic normative ideas or even by non-normative policies. The book sheds light on the underlying connection between politics and law.
Pablo Riberi is Professor of Constitutional Law at the School of Law of the National University of Cordoba, Argentina and Full Professor of Constitutional Theory at the School of Political Sciences of the Catholic University of Cordoba, Argentina.