Security and public health : pandemics and politics in the contemporary world / Simon Rushton.
Publisher: Cambridge : Polity, 2019Description: vii, 229 pages.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781509515882; 9781509515899.Subject(s): Medical policy | National security | Public health -- International cooperation | World health | Communicable diseases -- Prevention | EpidemicsDDC classification: 362.1969Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 362.1969 RUS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 018737 |
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362.19683 TEX Textbook of dementia care : | 362.1968588 FEI A history of autism : | 362.19689 MIL Military veteran psychological health and social care : | 362.1969 RUS Security and public health : pandemics and politics in the contemporary world / | 362.1969792 BOL The politics of prevention : | 362.1969792 FOW Aids : don't die of prejudice / | 362.1969792 FRA How to survive a plague : |
Introduction: disease and security in historical perspective -- 1. Pandemics and global health security -- 2. AIDS: a positive case of securitization? -- 3. Science, risk and uncertainty -- 4. Disease, human rights and security responses -- 5. Global inequalities and differential disease risks -- 6. Everyday insecurities, health priorities and global agendas -- Conclusion: towards a pro-health politics.
"For most Western governments, defending against the threat of infectious disease is now an accepted security priority. Deciding what resources and policies to put in place to protect populations from pandemics, however, involves difficult political choices. How can we get these decisions right? And what are we prepared to sacrifice to achieve better health security? In this book, Simon Rushton explores the politics of pandemics in the contemporary world. Looking back over three decades of public health, he traces national and international efforts to tackle infectious disease, focusing in-depth on three core areas in which securitization has been particularly successful: rapidly spreading pandemic diseases, HIV/AIDS and man-made pathogenic threats, such as biological weapons. Three central problems raised by common responses to disease as a security threat are then examined: the impact upon individuals and civil liberties; the tendency to treat the symptoms and not the underlying causes of disease outbreaks; and the limited range of diseases deemed worthy of global attention and action. Arguing against a tendency to treat global health security as a technical challenge, the book stresses the need for a vibrant, and even confrontational, political engagement around the implications of securitizing public health."-- Provided by publisher.