The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman animal problem, an economic industrial crisis that was resolved after eradication. By using a different lens, a longitudinal ethnographic study of the health and social consequences of the epidemic, the research reported here indicates that 2001 was a human tragedy as well as an animal one. In a diary-based study, it can be seen that life after the FMD crisis was accompanied by distress, feelings of bereavement, fear of a new disaster, loss of trust in authority and systems of control, and the undermining of the value of local knowledge. Diverse groups experienced distress well beyond the farming community. Such distress remained largely invisible...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
Although the title of this paper invokes a disease of sheep as well as cattle, my primary concern is...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
Objectives To understand the health and social consequences of the 2001 foot and mouth disease epide...
Many disasters are approached as if they have a clear beginning, middle and end, but the experience ...
ABSTRACT. Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals wer...
A Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak is not by definition similar to a Foot and Mouth Disease crisis. W...
Farmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowledge has ...
Farmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowledge has ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
Although the title of this paper invokes a disease of sheep as well as cattle, my primary concern is...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
The 2001 UK foot and mouth disease (FMD) crisis is commonly understood to have been a nonhuman anima...
Objectives To understand the health and social consequences of the 2001 foot and mouth disease epide...
Many disasters are approached as if they have a clear beginning, middle and end, but the experience ...
ABSTRACT. Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals wer...
A Foot and Mouth Disease outbreak is not by definition similar to a Foot and Mouth Disease crisis. W...
Farmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowledge has ...
Farmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowledge has ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) occurred in Miyazaki, Japan, in 2010, and 290,000 animals were culled. ...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
AbstractFarmers in general have to deal with many changes upon which traditional behaviour or knowle...
Although the title of this paper invokes a disease of sheep as well as cattle, my primary concern is...