ContentsIntroduction: emergency regimes for global health law 1Amrei Müller and Silvia BehrendtPART I THE WHO AND INFECTIOUS DISEASEMANAGEMENT: BETWEEN SECURITISATION,PRIVATE INFLUENCE AND ENSURING EQUITY1 The pandemic industry: reinstituting colonialism throughpublic health 28David Bell2 The Global Health Emergency Regime and the 2024amendments to the International Health Regulations 52Nithin Ramakrishnan and Sreenath NamboodiriPART II SECURITISATION AND PUBLIC-PRIVATEHYBRIDISATION: THE WHO AND THE EU3 Safe and effective medical countermeasures? TheInternational Health Regulations, the WHO's responsibilitiesfor the human right to health and emergency listed vaccines 88Amrei Müller and Silvia Behrendt4 The authority of the system of global health governance 126David McGrogan5 Where is the legal basis for HERA's and the EU's key rolein the securitisation and globalisation of their pandemicpreparedness and response policy? 149Michael Geistlinger6 Private law aspects of global pandemic preparedness,prevention, and response 181Günter ReinerPART III SECURITISATION AND PUBLIC-PRIVATEHYBRIDISATION: THE (EUROPEAN) DOMESTICLEVEL7 Governing during Covid-19: comparative insights on howhealth emergencies tested democracy 215Marie-Luce Paris8 'Lockdowns', rights violations, remedies, and the new globalhealth security order: lessons to be learnt from the Germanexperience? 244Kai Ambos9 Top-down versus bottom-up: WHO PHEIC Declarations andthe protection of human rights in Switzerland. A libertariananalysis 276David DürrConcluding remarks: emergency regimes for global health law 301Amrei Müller and Silvia Behrendt.
Emergency Regimes for Global Health : Law, Policy, and Institutions