48 Years of Impactful Scholarship

Volume 45, Issue 4

ETHICAL SURVEILLANCE IN VACCINE PASSPORTS

ETHICAL SURVEILLANCE IN VACCINE PASSPORTS

Abstract: This Essay explores the interrelated privacy and equality risks of deploying surveillance technology used in COVID-19 vaccine passports. The type of vaccine passport that governments implement has significant human rights ramifications. This Essay discusses how different vaccine passport designs can curb or exacerbate risks, providing a roadmap to guide policymakers in their app selection to mitigate unintended consequences. Vaccine passports should work on a decentralized system and use the least invasive data possible. Further, vaccine passports should be based solely on government vaccine data, be implemented only in places where vaccines are widely available for free, track location only when they are scanned, and provide a non-digital option. Governments should have clear sunset clauses for the app and the data collected.

Download the Article

Recommended Citation: Ignacio Cofone, Ethical Surveillance in Vaccine Passports, 45 Fordham Int'l L.J. 621 (2022).