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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Biosecurity Dilemmas examines conflicting values and interests in the practice of "biosecurity," the safeguarding of populations against infectious diseases through security policies. Biosecurity encompasses both the natural occurrence of deadly disease outbreaks and the use of biological weapons. Christian Enemark focuses on six dreaded diseases that governments and international organizations give high priority for research, regulation, surveillance, and rapid response: pandemic influenza, drug-resistant tuberculosis, smallpox, Ebola, plague, and anthrax. The book is organized around four ethical dilemmas that arise when fear causes these diseases to be framed in terms of national or international security: protect or proliferate, secure or stifle, remedy or overkill, and attention or neglect. For instance, will prioritizing research into defending against a rare event such as a bioterrorist attack divert funds away from research into commonly occurring diseases? Or will securitizing a particular disease actually stifle research progress owing to security classification measures?
Enemark provides a comprehensive analysis of the ethics of securitizing disease and explores ideas and policy recommendations about biological arms control, global health security, and public health ethics.
Contents:
Introduction Part I. Protect or Proliferate1. Biodefense and the Security Dilemma2. Vertical Proliferation and Threats from Within Part II. Secure of Stifle3. Laboratory Biosecurity4. Export and Publication Controls Part III. Remedy or Overkill5. Social Distancing and National Security6. Border Security and Transnational Contagion Part IV. Attention or Neglect7. The Agenda of Global Health Security8. Public Health and Biodefense Priorities Conclusion Selected BibliographyIndexAbout the Author
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Georgetown University Press
Publication date: March, 2017
Pages: 224
Weight: 503g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Ethics