Social, Moral and Legal Rules, Biopolitics and the Covid-19 Crisis

Q2 Social Sciences Global Jurist Pub Date : 2021-09-27 DOI:10.1515/gj-2021-0060
C. Garbarino
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract The article relies on the social and legal perspective not only to better understand how norms are created and change through interactions among agents, but also to shed light on how norms are internalized in social practice. The article is organized as follows. Initially the article explores the basic assumption that deontic operators acquire their meaning via social conventions generating “personal rules” having a “mental content” which belongs to a wider “normative mind”, a mind that obviously encompasses all sorts of choices. The article then describes the different types of personal rules, distinguishing social, moral, and legal rules across the normative mind, focusing on social rules within institutions, conceived as sets of rules in equilibrium. The core of this study puts to the test the taxonomy of personal (social, moral, and legal) rules within the normative mind by exploring a situation of “dense normativity” addressed by a 2021 Lancet paper concerning findings about “tight–loose cultures” during the Covid-19 crisis, and, for the sake of explanation, focuses on one of the main normative constraints that epitomizes the challenge of the Covid-19 crisis to “tight–loose” cultures: the “wear-mask rule”. These observations can be extended to other normative constraints of that crisis, but in essence they parse the interplay between the different types of personal rules, which not only are social, but also moral and legal, drawing conclusions that complement the findings of the Lancet paper with some critical observations. The article critically concludes with remarks about the co-existence of different normative systems of personal rules in a context of biopolitics and suggests that individual morality appears to be the core of normativity to address collective threats such as those caused by the Covid-19 crisis.
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社会,道德和法律规则,生物政治和Covid-19危机
摘要本文依靠社会和法律的视角,不仅可以更好地理解规范是如何通过主体之间的互动而产生和改变的,还可以阐明规范是如何在社会实践中内化的。这篇文章的组织结构如下。最初,文章探讨了一个基本假设,即义务操作者通过产生“个人规则”的社会惯例获得其意义,“个人规则具有属于更广泛的“规范心智”的“心理内容”,这种心智显然包含了各种选择。然后,文章描述了不同类型的个人规则,区分了规范思维中的社会、道德和法律规则,重点关注机构内的社会规则,这些规则被认为是平衡的规则集。本研究的核心是通过探索《柳叶刀》2021年一篇关于新冠肺炎危机期间“紧密-松散文化”发现的论文所涉及的“密集规范性”情况,来测试规范思维中个人(社会、道德和法律)规则的分类,重点关注新冠肺炎危机对“宽松”文化的挑战的主要规范约束之一:“佩戴口罩规则”。这些观察可以扩展到这场危机的其他规范约束,但从本质上讲,它们解析了不同类型的个人规则之间的相互作用,这些规则不仅是社会的,也是道德和法律的,得出的结论用一些批判性的观察补充了《柳叶刀》论文的发现。文章最后评论了在生物政治背景下个人规则的不同规范体系的共存,并指出个人道德似乎是应对集体威胁(如新冠肺炎危机造成的威胁)的规范性的核心。
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来源期刊
Global Jurist
Global Jurist Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: Global Jurist offers a forum for scholarly cyber-debate on issues of comparative law, law and economics, international law, law and society, and legal anthropology. Edited by an international board of leading comparative law scholars from all the continents, Global Jurist is mindful of globalization and respectful of cultural differences. We will develop a truly international community of legal scholars where linguistic and cultural barriers are overcome and legal issues are finally discussed outside of the narrow limits imposed by positivism, parochialism, ethnocentrism, imperialism and chauvinism in the law. Submission is welcome from all over the world and particularly encouraged from the Global South.
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