International audienceDebates about emerging infectious diseases often oppose natural conceptions of zoonotic reservoirs with cultural practices bringing humans into contact with animals. This article compares the representations of cross-species pathogens at ontological levels below the opposition between nature and culture. It describes the perceptions of distinctions between interiority and physicality, between wild and domestic, and between sick and dead in three different contexts where human societies manage animal diseases: Australia, Laos and Mongolia. Our article also argues that zoonotic pathogens are one of the entities mobilized by local knowledge to attenuate troubles in ordinary relations with animals, and shows that the conse...
Pandemics have occurred with increasing frequency over the past century as global travel enables rap...
Animal disease is a key shaper and product of human, animal and environmental history. Its emergence...
More than 60 % of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic ani...
International audienceDebates about emerging infectious diseases often oppose natural conceptions of...
Research leading to this paper was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant (under the E...
This article considers a broad perspective of “One Health” that includes local and animal knowledge....
The number of pathogens known to infect humans is ever increasing. Whether such increase reflects im...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Research regarding zoonotic diseases often focuses on infectious diseases a...
Emerging infectious diseases, most of which are considered zoonotic in origin, continue to exact a s...
International audienceThe rate of emergence for emerging infectious diseases has increased dramatica...
More than 60% of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic anim...
Research regarding zoonotic diseases often focuses on infectious diseases animals have given to huma...
BackgroundZoonotic diseases such as anthrax, rabies, brucellosis, and Rift Valley fever pose a direc...
This chapter highlights the potential of an integrated paleopathological approach for unravelling th...
A number of virological, epidemiological and ethnographic arguments suggest that COVID-19 has a zoon...
Pandemics have occurred with increasing frequency over the past century as global travel enables rap...
Animal disease is a key shaper and product of human, animal and environmental history. Its emergence...
More than 60 % of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic ani...
International audienceDebates about emerging infectious diseases often oppose natural conceptions of...
Research leading to this paper was funded by a European Research Council Starting Grant (under the E...
This article considers a broad perspective of “One Health” that includes local and animal knowledge....
The number of pathogens known to infect humans is ever increasing. Whether such increase reflects im...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Research regarding zoonotic diseases often focuses on infectious diseases a...
Emerging infectious diseases, most of which are considered zoonotic in origin, continue to exact a s...
International audienceThe rate of emergence for emerging infectious diseases has increased dramatica...
More than 60% of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic anim...
Research regarding zoonotic diseases often focuses on infectious diseases animals have given to huma...
BackgroundZoonotic diseases such as anthrax, rabies, brucellosis, and Rift Valley fever pose a direc...
This chapter highlights the potential of an integrated paleopathological approach for unravelling th...
A number of virological, epidemiological and ethnographic arguments suggest that COVID-19 has a zoon...
Pandemics have occurred with increasing frequency over the past century as global travel enables rap...
Animal disease is a key shaper and product of human, animal and environmental history. Its emergence...
More than 60 % of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic ani...