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The European Response to COVID19: From Regulatory Emulation to Regulatory Coordination?
- Source :
- European Journal of Risk Regulation
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- HAL CCSD, 2020.
-
Abstract
- COVID-19 is a matter of common European interest since its very first detection on the continent. Yet this pandemic outbreak has largely been handled as an essentially national matter.This article makes a first attempt at unpacking how such fragmented, uncoordinated national responses to COVID19 came into being under the EU legal order. To do so, it systematizes the European response into separate stages. Phase 1 – the emergency – has been characterized by the adoption of national emergency risk management measures that, albeit country specific, were inspired by a common objective of pandemic suppression, i.e. to reduce disease transmission and thereby diminishing pressure on health services, under the by now well-known ‘flatten the curve’ imperative. Phase 2 – the lifting – is about the attempt at relaxing some of the national risk responses in a coordinated fashion to avoid creating negative spillovers or distortions – be they sanitary and/or financial – across the Union.The article argues that contrary to conventional wisdom the resulting uncoordinated EU response to Covid-19 shouldn’t be seen as the inevitable consequence of the EU’s limited competence in public health. Against this backdrop, it strives to define the regulatory policy framework that might be governing the next phases of the European risk management response to this pandemic as they will emerge from a widely undefined yet unescapable dialectic between the Union and its member states. Ultimately, it predicts that by testing the outer limits of the EU public health competence COVID-19 is set to go down in history as a major catalyst in the advancement of EU health emergency action.
- Subjects :
- Risk analysis
medicine.medical_specialty
Scrutiny
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
International trade
Precautionary principle
JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law
Competence (law)
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Emergency Regulation
Political science
050602 political science & public administration
medicine
media_common.cataloged_instance
030212 general & internal medicine
European union
Worst-case scenarios
media_common
Emulation
Risk Regulation
Suppression
business.industry
Public health
JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law/K.K3.K33 - International Law
05 social sciences
Cost-benefit analysis
EU law
COVID-19
Articles
0506 political science
Coronavirus
Flatten the Curve
Action (philosophy)
Risk vs risk
JEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K3 - Other Substantive Areas of Law/K.K3.K32 - Environmental, Health, and Safety Law
[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration
business
[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration
Safety Research
Law
tradeoffs
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European Journal of Risk Regulation
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9dbb59ff683b298f0d63dcf609bddd5a