Pandemia COVID-19 jako możliwość trwałego ograniczenia praw obywatelskich

Paweł Chmielnicki, Dobrochna Minich, Radosław Rybkowski, Michał Stachura, Konrad Szocik

Streszczenie w języku polskim


Pandemia COVID-19 wywołała daleko idące skutki, które są widoczne przede wszystkim w funkcjonowaniu służby zdrowia, organizacji życia społecznego i stanie gospodarki narodowej. Warto zwrócić uwagę także na konsekwencje prawne i polityczne, które są mniej oczywiste i odczuwalne dla przeciętnych obywateli. Jedną z najważniejszych jest zmiana ustawodawstwa, która pociąga za sobą ograniczenie wolności i praw obywatelskich. Niniejszy artykuł jest empirycznym dowodem na to, jak polskie ustawodawstwo ogranicza prawa podstawowe. Władze w walce z pandemią nie korzystają z rozwiązań, które znajdują się w Konstytucji RP, lecz sięgają po pozakonstytucyjną formę tzw. specustaw. Omawiając to zagadnienie, autorzy odwołują się do amerykańskiego ustawodawstwa i polityki, gdzie znamiennym przykładem jest Patriot Act, który można interpretować jako pretekst do ograniczania swobód obywatelskich w imię walki z terroryzmem. Jak stwierdzono, takie sytuacje nadzwyczajne jak obecna pandemia czy zagrożenie terroryzmem są wykorzystywane do trwałego i znaczącego ograniczania praw obywatelskich.


Słowa kluczowe


pandemia COVID-19; prawa podstawowe; wolności obywatelskie; prawa obywatelskie; amerykańskie ustawodawstwo ; polskie ustawodawstwo

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Bibliografia


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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/sil.2021.30.4.77-109
Data publikacji: 2021-10-13 00:45:23
Data złożenia artykułu: 2021-03-22 10:24:56


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