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University of London Press

The law and the limits of the dressed body: masking regulation and the 1918–19 influenza pandemic in Australia

Chapter of: Law, Humanities and the COVID Crisis(pp. 75–108)

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Metadata
TitleThe law and the limits of the dressed body
Subtitlemasking regulation and the 1918–19 influenza pandemic in Australia
ContributorMark De Vitis(author)
David J. Carter(author)
Landing pagehttps://uolpress.co.uk/book/law-humanities-and-the-covid-crisis/
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode
CopyrightMark De Vitis and David J. Carter
PublisherUniversity of London Press
Published on2023-01-26
Page rangepp. 75–108
Print length34 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Contributors

Mark De Vitis

(author)
Lecturer in the Department of Art History at University of Sydney

Mark De Vitis is a Lecturer in the Department of Art History at the University of Sydney. His research has been supported by the Cité internationale des arts, Paris, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles and the Newberry Library, Chicago. His work focuses on the agency of material culture and its capacity to impact social histories of place, identity and cultural transference.

David J. Carter

(author)
Senior Lecturer and National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellow in the Faculty of Law at University of Technology Sydney

David J. Carter is a Senior Lecturer and National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellow at the University of Technology Sydney in the Faculty of Law. His work focuses on the legal, regulatory and govern- ance challenges involved in the delivery of safe, effective and sustainable health care services.