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  <title>Law and power in the age of emergencies: A global study</title>
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    The best estimate of global excess deaths caused by COVID-19 is 18.2 million persons.1 As this article will show, it has also represented a profound interference in freedom of movement in respect of mobility, commercial trading, international travel, and protest. Over 60 per cent of states covered in the present study issued emergency declarations, and 72 per cent enacted stay-at-home orders at the national, state, or local level.2 Resort to these measures also did not track with common expectations about popular and official attitudes toward the legitimacy of state regulation. The social democratic states of Finland, Norway, and Sweden, and Asian states of Taiwan and Korea, did not resort to stay-at-home orders. 
    ... &#x3C;a href="https://muse.jhu.edu/article/983134"&#x3E;Read More&#x3C;/a&#x3E;
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  <title>Tort law in the age of regulations</title>
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    Tort law serves three primary roles in our modern era &amp;#x2013; an era where health and safety regulations proliferate. First, tort has allowed recovery for harms in &amp;#x2018;transitional&amp;#x2019; situations when there is no existing regulatory scheme.1 Second, tort law has served as an information-forcing mechanism to surface information on risks and benefits where there is an existing regulatory scheme that does not yet regulate a given area comprehensively or dynamically. Third, tort law has acted as a tool to enforce existing regulations even where there is a comprehensive regulatory scheme in place. Ultimately, these roles of tort law in the age of regulations pose formidable questions with regard to how common law tort and federal 
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