This webinar will address how, as the Covid-19 pandemic continues to evolve, social and economic inequalities have contributed to its complexity. We will discuss what governments and policy-makers should do to better address the vulnerabilities of the most marginalized groups. We will also investigate how we can better prepare for the next pandemic. Finally, knowing that pandemic fatigue has started to kick in, we will discuss whether the window of opportunity to implement more fundamental reforms toward reducing inequalities has started to close.
Where: Zoom, please sign up here
Who: Check out our knowledgeable panel below
Gerard Quinn
Gerard Quinn is the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights of persons with disabilities. He was the founding director of the Centre for Disability Law and Policy at the National University of Ireland and now holds the Wallenberg Chair at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute and a research chair at the University of Leeds. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he holds three lifetime awards for his international disability law work, and he was a drafted of the UN disability convention.
Elina Castillo Jiménez
Elina Castillo Jiménez is a feminist human rights lawyer who works at the intersection of human rights, race, gender, migration and public policy. She holds law degrees from the Dominican Republic and the University of Nottingham, where she studied as a Chevening Scholar, and was a Visiting Scholar at the University of Minnesota Human Rights Center. As part of her multisector experience, she has worked for governments and international advocacy groups, such as Oxfam and Amnesty International.
Janine Moussa
Janine Moussa is a human rights lawyer with almost two decades of experience in women’s human rights. Among her many accomplishments, she co-founded the Due Diligence Project on State obligation to end violence against women, and served as Senior Program Specialist on violence against women with the UN Division for the Advancement of Women (now UN Women). She is an adjunct professor at George Washington School of Law in Washington, D.C.
Hope Metcalf
Hope Metcalf is Executive Director of the Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International Human Rights Law at Yale Law School, where she co-teaches a human rights clinic. She has represented people who have been arbitrarily detained and tortured in the context of U.S. counterterrorism operations as well as U.S. domestic prisons. Her teaching, research and writing focus on the rights of people in various forms of detention, and she consults with organizations around the world on those subjects.
Sep 29, 2021
10:00 am to 11:30 am