Déjà Vu All Over Again
The COVID-19 pandemic has shown us time and time again that whatever progress we make in curbing transmission of the virus is fragile and easily reversed.

The COVID-19 pandemic has shown us time and time again that whatever progress we make in curbing transmission of the virus is fragile and easily reversed.

Our research shows that social movement activism is an integral part of service delivery for sexual and reproductive health and gender-based violence.

A health justice approach would confront how ableism has influenced the development of reasonable accommodations law.

A new pandemic instrument should explicitly embrace the three emerging global regulatory standards of due diligence, due regard, and regulatory coherence.

An innovative pandemic treaty could become a transformative model of global solidarity in the face of common threats.

The state-centric infectious disease regime violates the fundamental principle of how contagious diseases spread within and across countries.

The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated how “Global Health Security” is triggered when new diseases reach, or threaten to reach, the global north.

This symposium was convened to shed light on the inequities and imbalances exposed by global pandemic response.

The legal basis of Americans’ supposed right to a religious exemption to vaccination is less clear than such policies’ popularity would suggest.
