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Research
New research published by the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission has found that the Ireland’s Emergency Powers During the COVID-19 PandemicGovernment has persistently blurred the boundary between legal requirements and public health guidance in its COVID-19 response. The study, a first of its kind evaluation of Ireland’s use of pandemic related emergency powers, also sets out significant concerns that human rights and equality scrutiny has been side-lined when emergency powers have been put in place, and makes recommendations to remedy this. Authored by experts from the COVID-19 Law and Human Rights Observatory in Trinity College Dublin, the study looks at the 4 statutes and more than 65 sets of regulations enacted between March and December 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Ireland’s Emergency Powers During the Covid-19 Pandemic - Feb 2021 by Conor Casey, Oran Doyle, David Kenny and Donna Lyons of Trinity College Dublin. Factsheet - Ireland's Emergency Powers During the Covid-19 Pandemic Ireland's Emergency Powers During the Covid-19 Pandemic