Rethinking Medico-Legal Borders: From international to internal histories

  • Funded by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  • Total publications:1 publications

Grant number: GA137275

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Key facts

  • Disease

    COVID-19, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
  • Start & end year

    2020
    2023
  • Known Financial Commitments (USD)

    $180,983.79
  • Funder

    National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  • Principal Investigator

    N/A

  • Research Location

    Australia
  • Lead Research Institution

    UNSW Sydney
  • Research Priority Alignment

    N/A
  • Research Category

    Policies for public health, disease control & community resilience

  • Research Subcategory

    Approaches to public health interventions

  • Special Interest Tags

    N/A

  • Study Type

    Non-Clinical

  • Clinical Trial Details

    N/A

  • Broad Policy Alignment

    Pending

  • Age Group

    Not Applicable

  • Vulnerable Population

    Not applicable

  • Occupations of Interest

    Not applicable

Abstract

The response to coronavirus has starkly revealed the significance of internal movement and its regulation. Yet the focus of scholarship on medico-legal border control remains almost exclusively on international movement. This project addresses that major gap by researching the regulation of internal movement in past and present pandemic times, with a focus on plague, influenza, SARS and coronavirus in Australia, and in comparison with Hong Kong. It will interrogate the ambiguous internal/international borders of ships in quarantine in the past and in the coronavirus present. Bringing law and history together, this project will clarify how internal movement has been, and can best be, lawfully restricted.

Publicationslinked via Europe PMC

Regulating Movement in Pandemic Times.