American contagions Epidemics and the law from smallpox to COVID-19

Book - 2020

" From yellow fever to smallpox to polio to AIDS to COVID-19, epidemics have prompted Americans to make choices and answer questions about their basic values and their laws. In five concise chapters, historian John Fabian Witt traces the legal history of epidemics, showing how infectious disease has both shaped, and been shaped by, the law. Arguing that throughout American history legal approaches to public health have been liberal for some communities and authoritarian for others, Witt shows us how history's answers to the major questions brought up by previous epidemics help shape our answers today: What is the relationship between individual liberty and the common good? What is the role of the federal government, and what is th...e role of the states? Will long-standing traditions of government and law give way to the social imperatives of an epidemic? Will we let the inequities of our mixed tradition continue?"--Amazon.

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Subjects
Published
New Haven, Connecticut : Yale University Press [2020]
Language
English
Physical Description
174 pages : 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780300257274
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Sanitationist State
  • Chapter 2. Quarantinism in America
  • Chapter 3. Civil Liberties in an Epidemic?
  • Chapter 4. New Sanitationisms / New Quarantinisms
  • Chapter 5. Masked Faces toward the Past
  • Afterword: Viral Protests
  • Notes
  • Suggested Reading
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Don't want to wear a virus-blocking mask? Well, neither did some people a century ago--and the law caught up with them, too. In a book that's both timely, considering the pandemic, and remarkably speedy, considering that it began as a spring 2020 Yale Law School class, Bancroft Prize winner Witt looks at the sometimes contending, sometimes cooperating forces of public interest and private liberty in times of epidemic disease. "New germs help make new laws and institutions," he writes, "yet old ways of doing things shape the course of epidemics and the ways in which we respond to them." In the earliest years of the republic as now, he observes, there have been two major branches of disease control: the sanitarian and the quarantinist. Then as now, the sanitarian--wear a mask, practice social distancing--has been reserved for the better off, while quarantines have been brought to bear on immigrant and minority populations. So it is that the White House argues with increased urgency for a wall to block putatively disease-bearing border crossers, and so it is that the earliest colonial inhabitants of the Hamptons ordered that "no Indian shall come to towne…until they be free of the small poxe." Whether Chinese worker, Jewish immigrant, or Irish tenement dweller, quarantinist measures of control applied to the Other, who often could not obey laws imposed by the landed majority, such as having dining and toilet facilities far apart. Witt documents how the federal government has consistently punted health regulations to the states, with results ranging from Michigan's banning anyone with a venereal disease from marrying to "Typhoid Mary" Mallon's serving 23 years in involuntary isolation, "never having been convicted of or even charged with a crime." No matter which regime is followed, writes the author, the current pandemic violates the doctrine that public health is paramount. Contrarians and the civic-minded alike will find Witt's legal survey a fascinating resource. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.