The Economist - USA (2022-06-11)

(Antfer) #1

62 International TheEconomistJune11th 2022


flout the law if it gets in their way. The third
reason  is  the  covid­19  pandemic.  Even
well­intentioned  governments  have  im­
posed emergency measures that have cur­
tailed  civil  liberties  and  legal  protections,
and  deprived  people  of basic  rights,  such
as to gather in public or even in private, or
to  leave  their  homeland,  or  to  return  to  it
from some places; it has also led to a surge
in the spread of dangerous disinformation,
which has sucked trust out of societies, as
has a perceived decline in equal treatment
under the law. It has, however, also sparked
some innovation that offers hope.
Within weeks of the World Health Orga­
nisation’s  declaring  the  covid­19  outbreak
to be a pandemic in March 2020, no fewer
than  84  countries  had  declared  states  of
emergency,  and  by  September  146  had  in­
troduced measures that affected the rights
of their citizens, according to the European
Centre  for  Not­for­profit  Law,  an  ngo
based in The Hague. Courts were forced to
stop  functioning,  or  to  shift  online,  with
many countries passing emergency laws to
change  procedures.  Pipelines  of  unre­
solved cases became even more clogged. In
India  the  number  of  outstanding  cases
rose  from  an  already  staggering  29m  in
2018 to 48m in May this year. 
Although  in  most  countries  states  of
emergency  have  been  lifted,  much  of  the
world  still  faces  some  restrictions.  Au­
thoritarians  are  particularly  reluctant  to
lift  emergency  rule—or  keen  to  replace  it
with  an  alternative  “emergency”.  In  Hun­
gary,  for  example,  with  a  covid  state  of
emergency due to expire on June 1st Viktor
Orbán, the prime minister, on May 24th de­
clared another one in response to the war
in Ukraine. In Hong Kong the annual gath­
ering  to  commemorate  the  June  4th  mas­
sacre  in  Beijing  in  1989  was  banned  this
year for the third year running. Social­dis­
tancing rules would again make it impos­
sible.  But  in  2020  a  national­security  law
was adopted that makes it illegal anyway.
The pandemic has damaged the rule of
law in a less direct way, too, by eroding the
fundamental  right  to  equal  treatment.  In
Singapore,  for  example,  migrant  workers
complained that rules locking them down
stayed in place far longer than those cover­
ing  other  people.  Elsewhere,  in  countries
from America to Finland, irksome regula­
tions  and  precautions  imposed  on  every­
one were flouted by those who had a hand
in devising them. 
A prime example is Britain, where dur­
ing lockdown 10 Downing Street, the home
and office of the prime minister, was used
for convivial booze­ups. Many voters have
been  outraged  that  rules  preventing  them
from  bidding  farewell  to  dying  relations
were seen as optional for those at the heart
of  government.  This  has  damaged  the
standing  of  the  prime  minister,  who  was
greeted by boos when he turned up on June

3rdatStPaul’sCathedralforaserviceto
markthequeen’splatinumjubilee.
Theharm,however,spreadsfarbeyond
theprimeminister,totheadvisersandcol­
leagueswhohavebackedhimashehas
mumbled half­apologies, to Parliament,
whichhasseemedunabletoholdthemto
account,andtothepolice,whoseinvesti­
gationappearedtardy,partialandincon­
sistent. Thescandalhasunderminedtrust
inthepoliticalsystemandthelaw.
Another damaging featureoftheco­
vid­19 pandemic was aconcurrent pan­
demic ofdisinformation. “There isper­
hapsnogreaterthreattotheruleoflawto­
day,”ElizabethAndersen,thewjp’sdirec­
tor,tolditsannualforuminTheHagueon
May31st.Justicerequiresnotjustaccessto
informationaboutthelaw but a shared
perceptionofthetruth.Thisyear’swinner
ofthewjp’s“RuleofLaw”awardisRede
Wayuri,a networkof 55 indigenouscom­
municatorsworkingintheBrazilianAma­
zontocounterdisinformation.
TheorganisationworksinthevastRio
NegroregionnearColombiaandVenezue­
la,hometo 750 communitiesfrom 23 in­
digenouspeoples.Residentshavelittleac­
cesstoreliable information,andwereal­
readyvulnerabletoexpropriationbymin­
ing companies and others telling them
theyhadnorighttotheirland.Duringthe
pandemic,RedeWayurifoundfakenews
aboutthevirusspreadinglikea forestfire.
Typically,localswouldvisittownand
return with the WhatsApp or Telegram
appsontheirphonesfilledwithnonsense.
Anespeciallyvirulentmemeheldthatco­
vid­19vaccinescontainedChinesemicro­
chips,to beusedtocontroltheinoculated.
Juliana Radler,a journalistwho advises
RedeWayuri,saysitsexposureofthelies
aboutvaccineshelpedbuildupscepticism
aboutotherfakenews,whichwillprolifer­
ate as campaigningfor the presidential
electioninOctobergatherssteam.

Inthatinstance,andinsomeothers,
thepandemicmayactuallyhavehelped.
Rose,forexample,theabusedFilipina,did
eventually find support—through Face­
book.ideals, a localgroupoflawyerswho
workwiththepoor,hadtofindnewways
ofreachingclientsinlockdown.Theyset
upa Facebookpage,TisyaHustisya,toan­
swer questions aboutever­changing so­
cial­distancingrules.Butitsoonbecamea
wayto servemorepeoplethantheyhadev­
erhelpedfacetoface.TheygaveRoseguid­
anceonhowtomakea policereport, and
thenonhowtofilea caseagainstherhus­
bandwiththehelpofa publicprosecutor.
Entrepreneursarealsoseeingpotential
in “people­centred justice”. hiil (The
HagueInstituteforInnovationofLaw),a
Dutchngo, hasteamedupwithfount, an
investment­advisory firm,to launchthe
InnovatingJusticeFund,tosupportyoung
growingbusinessesinthisfieldinemerg­
ingmarkets.CandidatesincludediyLaw,a
Nigerianfirmpromisingto“makelegalea­
sy”fornewcompaniesneedingtocross
registrationandotherhurdles;and,inTu­
nisia,Civitas,whichprovidescustomers
with“user­friendlyplatformsforobtain­
ingpermitsandlicences”—ie,helpsthem
navigatethebureaucracy.
Legalservices’moveonline,hastened
bythepandemic,createsanopportunityto
extendaccess andtocurbcorruption(itis
hardtopassa brownenvelopetoeventhe
user­friendliest of platforms). It does,
however, risk further discrimination
againstthosewithlessaccesstotheinter­
net,andraiseconcernsaboutprivacyand
thesecurityofdata. Andit isworthbearing
inmindthatmostjusticeproblemsdonot
involvetheformallegalsystematall.In
manycountriesperhapsthebestwayto
improveaccesstojusticeistodevotemore
resourcesto helping grassrootsactivists
working with those who would never
dreamofgoingtocourt.n

-4 -2 0 2 4
Nodata
←Declining Improving→

Source: World Justice Project *13    countries, scores range from 0 to 1 where 1 signifies the strongest adherence to the rule of law

They fought the law and the law lost
Rule of Law index overall score*, 2021
% change on a year earlier
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