This chapter presents a broader approach to the securitization of infectious diseases; one which includes the heavy and widespread health burden posed by slower-spreading, endemic diseases like HIV/AIDS. It focuses on the possibility of elevating naturally-occurring disease outbreaks to the security agenda. A reason for limiting securitization to a select category of dreaded infectious disease threats is that this may minimize the risks associated with framing a health issue in terms traditionally reserved for military threats. To frame an infectious disease as a security issue is to lend it a sense of urgency, and to seek some of the overriding political interest and superior financial resources associated with more traditional concepts of...
In the closing decade of the 20th century the myriad challenges posed by infectious disease in a glo...
In this chapter, students will learn why health has not traditionally been seen as a security issue ...
Health issues, especially infectious diseases, have affected world history more extensively than mos...
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Should the global AIDS pandemic be framed as an international security issue? Drawing on securitizat...
Steven Schoofs & Georg Frerks discuss whether the AIDS epidemic should be regarded as an interna...
The securitisation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AI...
This article analyses the conjunctures of risk and security that have recently emerged in the securi...
This introduction presents an overview of key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this ...
Since HIV and AIDS were discovered in the early 1980s the infection rates have taken on the proporti...
In this paper we offer a preliminary examination of the securitisation of HIV/AIDS. In the first hal...
The post-Cold War era in U.S. foreign policy abounds with claims that so-called new or nontraditiona...
This dissertation examines the efficacy of securitization as a strategy for drawing attention and re...
In the closing decade of the 20th century the myriad challenges posed by infectious disease in a glo...
In this chapter, students will learn why health has not traditionally been seen as a security issue ...
Health issues, especially infectious diseases, have affected world history more extensively than mos...
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Securitization of infectious diseases may involve suspension of ordinary human rights and liberties....
Should the global AIDS pandemic be framed as an international security issue? Drawing on securitizat...
Steven Schoofs & Georg Frerks discuss whether the AIDS epidemic should be regarded as an interna...
The securitisation of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AI...
This article analyses the conjunctures of risk and security that have recently emerged in the securi...
This introduction presents an overview of key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of this ...
Since HIV and AIDS were discovered in the early 1980s the infection rates have taken on the proporti...
In this paper we offer a preliminary examination of the securitisation of HIV/AIDS. In the first hal...
The post-Cold War era in U.S. foreign policy abounds with claims that so-called new or nontraditiona...
This dissertation examines the efficacy of securitization as a strategy for drawing attention and re...
In the closing decade of the 20th century the myriad challenges posed by infectious disease in a glo...
In this chapter, students will learn why health has not traditionally been seen as a security issue ...
Health issues, especially infectious diseases, have affected world history more extensively than mos...