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Strengthening Human Rights in Global Health Law: Lessons from the COVID-19 Response

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2021

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Abstract

While human rights law has evolved to provide guidance to governments in realizing human rights in public health emergencies, the COVID-19 pandemic has challenged the foundations of human rights in global health governance. Public health responses to the pandemic have undermined international human rights obligations to realize (1) the rights to health and life, (2) human rights that underlie public health, and (3) international assistance and cooperation. As governments prepare for revisions of global health law, new opportunities are presented to harmonize global health law and human rights law, strengthening rights-based governance to respond to future threats.

Type
Columns: Global Health Law
Copyright
© 2021 The Author(s)

Human rights are central to global health, yet human rights weaknesses in the COVID-19 response have highlighted both the intrinsic and instrumental importance of strengthening human rights in global health law. Reflecting on human rights limitations in the pandemic, the World Health Assembly (WHA) is just beginning work to improve capacity for global pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response, presenting opportunities to ensure human rights realization in future public health emergencies. It will be crucial in these reforms to strengthen human rights in global health, enabling the World Health Organization (WHO) to support member states in realizing health-related human rights.

This column addresses the need to strengthen human rights in global health, looking to violations of human rights law in the pandemic response to recommend rights-based reforms in global health law. The column opens by examining the fundamental importance of human rights, recognizing the centrality of human rights in global health governance. Notwithstanding the evolution of health-related human rights under international law, the COVID-19 pandemic response has had sweeping implications for the realization of human rights, with state responses failing to comply with domestic and international human rights obligations. Raising an imperative to strengthen human rights in global health law, this column presents recommendations to advance health through the United Nations (UN) human rights system, extend human rights in revisions of the International Health Regulations (IHR), and mainstream human rights in WHO governance.

Human Rights Law in Global Health Governance

Facilitating dignity, well-being, and justice under international law, human rights stand as a central normative framework for global health, offering universal standards by which to frame government responsibilities and facilitate international accountability. With the UN seeking to promote “respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,” 1 states have worked within the UN to establish health-related human rights under international human rights law, developing a formal legal basis to codify norms and principles for the realization of health care and underlying determinants of health. Human rights law has thus become a foundation to frame infectious disease prevention, detection, and response.

Following from the development of health-related human rights under international treaties, the UN has shifted to the implementation of human rights through national governments and global institutions, seeking to mainstream human rights in global health governance. Since the early years of the HIV/AIDS response, which revealed the inextricable linkages between health and human rights, WHO has sought to implement human rights across its policies, programs, and practices.Reference Gostin 2 As the WHA moved to revise the International Health Regulations (IHR) at the turn of the century, it incorporated human rights obligations as central to responding to public health emergencies, with IHR (2005) requiring that implementation “shall be with the full respect for the dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms of persons.”Reference Gostin, Habibi and Meier 3

Impact of COVID-19 and COVID-19 Responses on Human Rights

However, the global response to COVID-19 has weakened these foundations of human rights law in global health, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres decrying “a pandemic of human rights abuses in the wake of COVID-19.”Reference Guterres 4 Highlighting limitations of human rights in global health law, violative pandemic responses have undermined international human rights obligations to realize (1) the rights to health and life, (2) human rights that underlie public health, and (3) international assistance and cooperation.

The global response to COVID-19 has weakened these foundations of human rights law in global health, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres decrying “a pandemic of human rights abuses in the wake of COVID-19.” Highlighting limitations of human rights in global health law, violative pandemic responses have undermined international human rights obligations to realize (1) the rights to health and life (2) human rights that underlie public health, and (3) international assistance and cooperation.

The Rights to Health and Life

The right to health, codified semi-nally in the 1966 International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), requires states to take legal and policy measures to respect, protect, and fulfill determinants of health; prevent, treat, and control infectious diseases; and make health services available, accessible, acceptable, and good quality. 5 Yet, states have neglected these obligations in the pandemic response through failures to establish effective testing, contact tracing, social distancing, isolation, and quarantine policies.Reference Puras 6 With national health systems weakened by years of funding cuts in contexts of austerity and structural adjustment, states have struggled to provide treatment, care, and vaccination to all in need in the pandemic response. 7 These failures to guarantee determinants of health on the basis of equality and non-dis-crimination have shaped the unequal distribution of infections and deaths in the COVID-19 pandemic, placing increased burdens on vulnerable and marginalized communities.

Human Rights that Underlie Public Health

The 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights explicitly recognizes an imperative for states to limit or derogate from certain rights when strictly necessary to protect public health. The Siracusa Principles on the Limitation and Derogation Provisions in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1984) first sought to define the scope of permissible limitations of civil and political rights — where the measures are necessary, proportionate, non-discriminatory, and subject to review. 8 Properly designed and implemented, such restrictions on specific rights can safeguard rights to life and health through public health measures, including social distancing, surveillance, lockdowns, curfews, isolation, and quarantine. However, emergency responses in many countries have been adopted without consideration of the Siracusa Principles, threatening both human rights and public health.Reference Sekalala 9 Such health measures have inequitably affected (and at times selectively targeted) marginalized and vulnerable groups, with violations of civil and political rights resulting in discrimination, incarceration, violence, and exploitation. Further undermining economic and social rights, the lack of government social protections and economic supports has posed iniquitous repercussions in ensuring rights to adequate food, education, housing, standards of living, and physical and mental health.Reference Kapilashrami 10

International Assistance and Cooperation

These human rights obligations must be realized both domestically and through international assistance and cooperation. Building from the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), which recognizes that “everyone is entitled to a social and international order” in which rights and freedoms can be realized, international human rights law has evolved to establish international obligations to support the progressive realization of human rights in states lacking the resources to meet their domestic obligations. 11 With wide-ranging implications for global health governance, the UN system has repeatedly called for global solidarity in the pandemic response. However, many high-income states have failed to comply with their transbound-ary obligations, enacting nationalist measures that restrict the international flow of essential goods. 12 This neglect of global health governance in confronting a global health threat has led to devastating COVID-19 inequities and limited vaccine access, as high-income states have blocked waivers of intellectual property rights and failed to adequately fund and supply the COVAX Initiative.Reference Gostin, Karim and Meier 13

Strengthening Human Rights in Global Health Law and Governance

Action is needed to strengthen human rights in global health law and governance. Human rights have increasingly come to be seen as a central responsibility of institutions of global health governance.Reference Meier and Gostin 14 Recognizing the continuing linkages between human rights and public health, UN agencies have been united in calls for human rights-based responses to COVID-19. Out of the limitations of the COVID-19 response, new opportunities are arising to improve compliance with human rights law through (1) emerging guidance on human rights-based approaches, (2) reprioritizing human rights in infectious disease control, and (3) building human rights capacity in the WHO.

Emerging Guidance on Human Rights-Based Approaches

The realization of human rights is necessary both to protect public health and to maintain the core international values that bind the world together. Seeking to incorporate international human rights law in public health practice, institutions within the UN human rights system have issued extensive guidance on rights-based responses to COVID-19, providing the building blocks for states and international organizations to implement human rights in legal and policy responses to the pandemic, including in the implementation of global health law. With efforts underway to develop human rights guiding principles for global health emergencies, it will be necessary to align principles of human rights law and global health law in facing future public health threats.Reference Habibi 15

Reprioritizing Human Rights in Infectious Disease Control

The continuing evolution of global health law, including through anticipated revisions of the IHR and a new pandemic treaty, will create opportunities for enhancing the legal protection of human rights. This opportunity to promote global health security while safeguarding human rights can allow the WHA and UN to codify specific human rights obligations in the context of infectious disease control. As seen in the COVID-19 response, public health emergencies can create scientific uncertainty and demand global solidarity, and it is necessary for global health law to elaborate relevant human rights principles to shape contemporary public health practice.Reference Meier, Huffstetler and Habibi 16 Drawing from human rights interpretations in the context of COVID-19, revisions of global health law can more robustly incorporate civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights throughout infectious disease control, guiding states in realizing human rights to support public health and clarifying whether, when, and how to resort to public health measures that may limit human rights.

Building Human Rights Capacity in the WHO

WHO’s high level commitment to human rights, reflected in its Global Programme of Work (2019-23) and robust defense of the right to health in the COVID-19 response, 17 now demands capacity building efforts to mainstream human rights in WHO governance. Mainstreaming human rights across the Organization (at headquarters, regional, and country levels) will require technical guidance and staff training on rights-based approaches to health, spaces for civil society participation in organizational decisionmaking, and institutional accountability for the progressive realization of the right to health. Through collaboration with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, WHO has recently formalized a Framework of Cooperation to build capacity for human rights-based approaches in health programming and strengthen consideration of health by the UN human rights system. 18 This agreement provides a pathway for the WHO to support human rights accountability in the COVID-19 response — which will be critically important as UN treaty bodies resume review processes and the UN Human Rights Council provides oversight through the Universal Periodic Review.Reference de Mesquita and Kothari 19

Conclusion

It will be necessary to strengthen human rights in global health law and governance in preparing for future public health emergencies. WHO must continue to take steps to mainstream human rights in global health, expanding its human rights staff to support human rights implementation in WHO policies, programs, and practices. As states prepare for future revisions of global health law — with revisions to the IHR and a new pandemic treaty under consideration — it will be crucial to ensure that global health law reconciles public health imperatives with human rights protections, safe-guardinig individual rights and supporting global solidarity. Extending partnerships between global health governance and the UN human rights system, rights-based oversight mechanisms can be developed to hold states accountable for realizing human rights law in responding to public health threats. These reforms provide a path to strengthen human rights in global health law, learning from the COVID-19 response to build back better.

Note

This column is based upon the human rights background paper that was developed by the co-authors for the Independent Panel on Pandemic Preparedness and Response.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to Preeyanka Rao for her research assistance in developing this column.

Footnotes

About This Column

Lawrence O. Gostin and Benjamin Mason Meier serve as the section editors for Global Health Law. Professor Gostin is University Professor at Georgetown University and the Founding Linda D. & Timothy J. O’Neill Professor of Global Health Law at Georgetown University Law Center and Director of the World Health Organization Center on National and Global Health Law. Professor Meier is a Professor of Global Health Policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Scholar at the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law. This column features timely analyses and perspectives on law, policy, and justice in global health.

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