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Law, Humanities and the COVID Crisis: Acknowledgements

Law, Humanities and the COVID Crisis
Acknowledgements
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of Figures
  6. Notes on Contributors
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Introduction
  9. 1. Public Interest or Social Need? Reflections on the Pandemic, Technology and the Law
  10. 2. COVID, Commodification and Conspiracism
  11. 3. Counting the Dead During a Pandemic
  12. 4. The Law and the Limits of the Dressed Body: Masking Regulation and the 1918–19 Influenza Pandemic in Australia
  13. 5. Walls and Bridges: Framing Lockdown through Metaphors of Imprisonment and Fantasies of Escape
  14. 6. Penal Response and Biopolitics in the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic: An Indonesian Experience
  15. 7. The Pandemic and Two Ships
  16. 8. Women, Violence and Protest in Times of COVID-19
  17. 9. COVID-19 and the Legal Regulation of Working Families
  18. 10. Law, Everyday Spaces and Objects, and Being Human
  19. 11. Pandemic, Humanities and the Legal Imagination of the Disaster
  20. 12. Prospects for Recovery in Brazil: Deweyan Democracy, the Legacy of Fernando Cardoso and the Obstruction of Jair Bolsonaro
  21. Index

Acknowledgements

I would like to express my appreciation to all of the contributors to the Director’s Series on Law and Humanities in a Pandemic for their rich and deeply textured presentations. Through their participation, the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (IALS) was able to demonstrate once again its value to a global community of legal researchers, and in the most challenging of circumstances. Particular thanks are owed to Daly Sarcos, Academic Engagement and Impact Officer in the School of Advanced Study, for her outstanding technical support of the series. I am enormously grateful to Sandy Dutczak, Digital Projects and Publications Manager at IALS, for her enthusiastic editorial support of this project. I am also grateful to Eliza Boudier, Fellowships and Administrative Officer at IALS, for her unfailing administrative support. Finally, thanks are due to Paula Kennedy, Emma Gallon and Lauren De’Ath at University of London Press for their commitment to this work.

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