Uncertainty, Vaccination, and the Duties of Liberal States

Pei Hua Huang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter/Conference proceedingChapterAcademic

1 Citation (Scopus)
15 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

It is widely accepted that a liberal state has a general duty to protect its people from undue health risks. However, the unprecedented emergent measures against the COVID-19 pandemic taken by governments worldwide give rise to questions regarding the extent to which this duty may be used to justify suspending a vaccine rollout on marginal safety grounds. In this chapter, I use the case of vaccination to argue that while a liberal state has a general duty to protect its people’s health, there is a limit to the measures this duty can be used to justify. First, I argue that since every available option involves different risks and benefits, the incommensurability of the involved risks and benefits forbids the prioritisation of a particular vaccine. Second, I argue that given epistemic limitations and uncertainty, policies that favour certain vaccines are not only epistemically ill-founded but also morally unacceptable. I conclude that in a highly uncertain situation such as the unfolding pandemic, the duty a liberal state ought to uphold is to properly communicate the knowns and unknowns to the general public and help people decide which option to choose for themselves. I call this duty the duty to facilitate risk-taking.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationValues for a Post-Pandemic Future
PublisherSpringer Nature Switzerland AG
Pages97-110
Number of pages14
Edition1
ISBN (Electronic)978-3-031-08424-9
ISBN (Print)978-3-031-08423-2, 978-3-031-08426-3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14 Sept 2022

Publication series

SeriesPhilosophy of Engineering and Technology
Volume40
ISSN1879-7202

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s).

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