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10 State Crime J. 4 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/stecrjl10 and id is 1 raw text is: STATE CRIME, STRUCTURAL VIOLENCE
AND COVID-19
Neve Gordon and Penny Green
Three weeks after the COVID-19 outbreak, the Hungarian parliament conferred for-
midable executive powers on Prime Minister Viktor Orbdn, allowing him to rule by
decree (Guardian 2020). In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced
that surveillance tools developed by the secret services to monitor Palestinians in the
occupied territories would be used to track citizens infected with coronavirus (Tidy
2020). Meanwhile, the Chilean government sent the military to public squares that
had until recently been occupied by protesters, while in the Philippines police
arrested over 40,000 people within the first 11 days of the country's lockdown on
charges of violating quarantine policies (Gebrekidan 2020; Cheng 2020). These are
worrying trends. While the introduction of emergency measures to address the
global pandemic is undoubtedly necessary, such forms of intervention underscore
how many governments have exploited the COVID-19 crisis to introduce measures
that undermine democratic principles and violate the civil and political rights of both
citizens and migrants. Such state crimes are characterised by government over-reach
where the executive arm uses its powers to undercut basic freedoms.
Yet the crimes of government over-reach have, to a significant extent, been
overshadowed by more structural and attritional forms of violence-less com-
monly understood as state crimes. We frame these largely structural crimes as
products of government under-reach. Government under-reach, it is important to
emphasise, should not be identified with the absence of government intervention.
Rather, it denotes forms of intervention designed to implement certain kinds of
deregulation and austerity measures that have led to the evisceration of welfare
policies and the erosion of the social safety net. This, to be sure, is not a new phe-
nomenon. Long before the outbreak of the COVID-19 emergency measures, cro-
nyism and mass disinvestment in public services and infrastructure inhibited the
human rights and life chances of millions.
Indeed, during these exceptional times emergency measures have not only been
exploited to curtail civil rights and democratic freedoms, but they have also been
Neve Gordon, Queen Mary University of London.
Penny Green, Queen Mary University of London

STATE CRIME 10.1  2021

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