Elsevier

World Development

Volume 134, October 2020, 105054
World Development

Letters on Urgent Issues
COVID-19 palaver: Ending rights violations of vulnerable groups in Africa

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2020.105054Get rights and content

Abstract

This commentary amplifies the rising spate of human rights violations as laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa. It notes that while governments in the region have declared restrictions on social gathering, in a bid to upend the deadly contagion, rights violations of vulnerable groups by law enforcement officials are on the increase. It argues that the underlying rationale for such flagrant abuse of power stems from the dearth of a rights-based approach to police-public relations, indifference of political actors, and a grossly inadequate public health and social care infrastructures for undervalued and powerless groups. Policy implications are laid out while suggestions are offered to social work professionals given their longstanding commitment to national security and development.

Keywords

COVID-19
Human rights violations
Social work
Social policy
Africa
Rule of law

Cited by (0)

Solomon Amadasun is a pioneer first-class graduate, an exceptional scholar, and the author of the flagship text: Social Work for Social Development in Africa. He has to his credit multiple research outputs in the world's elite publishers such as ELSEVIER, OXFORD, SAGE, ROUTLEDGE, and SPRINGER. A distinguished recipient of numerous academic prizes and awards, he writes from the Department of Social Work, University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria.

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ORCID ID: 0000-0002-1946-0432.

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