Abstract

This article analyses the administrative measures and, more specifically, the administrative strategy implemented in the immediacy of the emergency by the Italian government in order to determine whether it was effective in managing the COVID-19 pandemic throughout the country. In analysing the administrative strategy, the article emphasises the role that the current system of constitutional separation of powers plays in emergency management and how this system can impact health risk assessment. An explanation of the risk management system in Italian and European Union (EU) law is provided and the following key legal issues are addressed: (1) the notion and features of emergency risk regulation from a pandemic perspective, distinguishing between risk and emergency; (2) the potential and limits of the precautionary principle in EU law; and (3) the Italian constitutional scenario with respect to the main provisions regulating central government, regional and local powers. Specifically, this article argues that the administrative strategy for effectively implementing emergency risk regulation based on an adequate and correct risk assessment requires “power sharing” across the different levels of government with the participation of all of the institutional actors involved in the decision-making process: Government, Regions and local authorities.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 has become a global health emergency.[1]

  • According to Article 120(2), the Government can act for the Regions and other local authorities if: (1) the latter fail to comply with international rules and treaties or European Union (EU) legislation; (2) in the case of grave danger for public safety and security; or (3) whenever such action is necessary to preserve legal or economic unity and in particular to guarantee the basic level of benefits relating to civil and social entitlements, regardless of the geographical borders of local authorities

  • In this article, starting from the main regulatory acts and considering scientific knowledge and epidemiological data on COVID-19, I have analysed the administrative measures and strategies for fighting the pandemic implemented by the Government in the immediacy of the emergency

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

COVID-19 has become a global health emergency.[1]. The World Health Organization (WHO) initially declared the COVID-19 outbreak a “Public Health Emergency of. Is a special case: here, the COVID-19 outbreak spiralled upwards earlier and more severely than elsewhere in Europe, reaching a high mortality rate and creating the conditions for the public healthcare system’s collapse In this scenario, the Italian government ( on the Government) declared a nationwide state of emergency,[4] followed by increasingly restrictive measures aimed at slowing and containing the spread of the virus and mitigating the pandemic’s effects under the well-known “flatten the curve” imperative. In this article, starting from the main regulatory acts and considering recent scientific knowledge and epidemiological data on COVID-19, we will examine the administrative measures the Government has taken and the strategy it has implemented to deal with the pandemic in the immediacy of the emergency. The article argues that the administrative strategy for effectively implementing emergency risk regulation based on an adequate and correct risk assessment requires “power sharing” across the different levels of government with the participation of all of the institutional actors involved in the decision-making process: Government, Regions and local authorities

THE STRONG STRATEGY
Emergency risk regulation
The precautionary principle in EU law: potential and limits
Rules governing powers and competences in the constitutional scenario
Sharing emergency administrative powers
Possible solutions from the constitutional perspective
CONCLUSION

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