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National Security, Public Health: Exceptions to Human Rights?

Edited by: Myriam Feinberg, Laura Niada-Avshalom, Brigit Toebes

ISBN13: 9781138309067
Published: January 2018
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2016)
Price: £47.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781138193789



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The book deals with the complicated relationships between national security and human rights, and between public health and human rights.

Its premise is the fact that national security and public health are both included in human rights instruments as ‘exceptions’ to the human rights therein sanctioned, yet they can arguably be considered as human rights themselves and be equally valuable.

The book therefore asks to what extent the protection of the individual could – or should – be overridden to enable the protection of the national security or public health of the general public. Both practice and case law have shown that human rights risk being set aside when they clash with the protection of national security or public health.

Through theoretical analysis and practical examples, the book addresses the conflicts that arise when the concepts of national security and public health are used – and abused – and other rights, including freedom of speech, procedural freedoms, individual health, are violated as a consequence. It provides many interesting findings on the values that states are ready to protect – and forego – to ensure their safety, which can contribute to the ongoing debate on the protection of human rights.

This book was originally published as a special issue of The International Journal of Human Rights.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
Foreword: National security and public health: exceptions to human rights? Myriam Feinberg, Laura Niada-Avshalom and Brigit Toebes
1. International counterterrorism – national security and human rights: conflicts of norms or checks and balances? Myriam Feinberg
2. Protecting ‘national security’ whistleblowers in the Council of Europe: an evaluation of three approaches on how to balance national security with freedom of expression Dimitrios Kagiaros
3. Resisting accountability: transitional justice in the post-9/11 United States Jonathan Hafetz
4. From the barrier to refugee law: national security’s transformation from a balancing right to a background element in the realms of Israeli constitutionalism Solon Solomon
5. The use of incapacitating chemical agent weapons in law enforcement Michael Crowley and Malcolm Dando
6. Human rights and public health: towards a balanced relationship Brigit Toebes
7. WHO International Health Regulations and human rights: from allusions to inclusion Andraž Zidar
8. Some scepticism on the right to health: the case of the provision of medicines Laura Niada-Avshalom