1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910350283303321

Titolo

Pandemics, Publics, and Politics : Staging Responses to Public Health Crises / / edited by Kristian Bjørkdahl, Benedicte Carlsen

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Singapore : , : Springer Singapore : , : Imprint : Palgrave Pivot, , 2019

ISBN

981-13-2802-1

Edizione

[1st ed. 2019.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (VIII, 91 p.)

Collana

Palgrave pivot

Disciplina

306.461

Soggetti

Social medicine

Medical anthropology

Medicine

Medical Sociology

Medical Anthropology

Medicine/Public Health, general

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

CHAPTER 1 Introduction -- CHAPTER 2 Global Health Governance and Pandemics: Uncertainty and Institutional Decision-Making -- CHAPTER 3 Uncertainty and Immunity in Public Communications on Pandemics -- CHAPTER 4 Enacting Pandemics: How Health Authorities Use the Press – and Vice Versa -- CHAPTER 5 “Disease Knows No Borders”: Pandemics and the Politics of Global Health Security -- CHAPTER 6 When Authority Goes Viral: Digital Communication and Health Expertise on pandemi.no.

Sommario/riassunto

Pandemics are potentially very destructive phenomena, and for that reason, they both fascinate and frighten us. And because they are shot through with uncertainty, they often become sites of contestation and conflict. This book presents research on the 2009 pandemic and other public health crises in an attempt to describe and analyze the distinctive challenges that such diseases pose today. Thanks to vaccines, more reliable provision of medical services, more effective means of communication, and a more educated public, some argue we will not see a new Black Plague – or even Spanish Flu – in our time. Today we face new challenges, however, which can both enable



diseases to reach pandemic scales and affect our ability to enact an appropriate response. Those include fragmentation of media, tribalization of “knowledge regimes,” the increasingly troubled status of scientific and political expertise, growing cross-continental mobility, as well as the globalization and commercialization of pandemic response systems. These distinctive complexities make the need to stage public action in response to pandemics and other public health crises a crucial problem, on which thousands of human lives hinge. This volume consists of a handful of social science and humanities studies of precisely such complexities, and thus offers a much-needed supplement to existing research on pandemics and pandemic response.