Avian Influenza
Science, Policy and Politics
Edited by Ian Scoones
Cloth: 978 1 84971 095 4
Price: $140.00  

Paper: 978 1 84971 096 1
Price: $39.95  

Publisher: Earthscan Publications Ltd.
May 2010 , 320 pp., 6 1/4" x 9 1/4"
photos, maps & figures

Series: Pathways to Sustainability Series
Over the past decade, substantial resources have been spent on tackling avian influenza and building a global capacity for a pandemic response. The catastrophic costs of the 1918 influenza pandemic are well documented, and the swine flu pandemic of 2009-10 has raised the alarm yet again. Across the world, surveillance systems have been upgraded, stockpiles of antiviral drugs and influenza vaccines have been created, veterinary and public health systems have been improved and poultry production and marketing has been dramatically restructured. What are the lessons from this experience? And what does this suggest for the future?

This book explores how virus genetics, ecology and epidemiology intersect with economic, political and policy processes in a variety of places--from Bangkok to Washington, to Jakarta, Cairo, Rome and London. It focuses on the interaction of international and national responses--and in particular the experiences of Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia and Thailand. It asks how effective the disease surveillance and response system is — and whether it can respond to a new pandemic threat. The comparative analysis reveals the challenges and limitations of a technocratic, centralized response, and the need to take local contexts seriously. Drawing from these experiences, the book concludes with a discussion of future prospects and challenges, examining in particular what a "One World, One Health" approach--where approaches to animal, human and ecosystem health are integrated--would look like in practice.

Table of Contents:
Preface
Acknowledgements
About the authors
Acronyms

1. The International Response to Avian Influenza: Science, Policy and Politics
2. Unpacking the International Response to Avian Influenza: Actors, Networks and Narratives
3. Cambodia's Patient Zero: Global and National Responses to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
4. Power, Politics, and Accountability: Vietnam's Response to Avian Influenza
5. On a Wing and a Prayer: Avian Influenza in Indonesia
6. Avian Influenza Control in Thailand: Balancing the Interests of Different Poultry Producers
7. Towards a One World, One Health Approach


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Reviews & Endorsements:
"Preparing for pandemics is a major challenge for our global public health security. Based on a detailed examination of the experience of the international avian influenza response, this book provides important new directions and options for the way forward. It should be read by all those across the world who are concerned with public health and its underpinning policies."
- David L. Heymann, Head, Global Health Security, Chatham House, London, formerly Assistant Director General , World Health Organization, Geneva
"This provocative and stimulating book gives an overview and innovative analysis of a disease of global and local importance. It explores the tensions between international agencies and government thinking on disease control, and the strategies of local level producers in developing and middle income countries, constrained by poverty and limited technology. This collection of case studies and the original synthesis into which they are woven will be of immediate interest for policymakers, scientists and students of emerging diseases."
- Katherine Homewood, Professor of Anthropology , University College London