Livestock production systems and the societies in which they are embedded face a set of risks presented by infectious diseases and natural and human-made disasters which compromise animal health. Within this set, threats are posed by natural, deliberate and accidental actions that can cause sudden changes in animal health status, requiring the allocation of additional resources to manage animal health. Determining the benefit of preparing for such emergencies is a challenge when the total set of risks includes the unknown. Any method for analysing the economic costs and benefits of animal health emergencies must not only accommodate this uncertainty, but make it a central feature of the analysis. Cost-benefit analysis is a key approach to e...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Working Paper SMART-LERECO N° 11-05 The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long ...
Livestock production systems and the societies in which they are embedded face a set of risks presen...
The economics of emergency animal disease outbreak response is impacted by a range of factors, such ...
Biological emergencies such as the appearance of an exotic transboundary or emerging disease can bec...
Animal disease outbreaks either through deliberate terroristic act or accidental introductions prese...
A FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING THE TANGIBLE AND INTANGIBLE IMPACTS OF EMERGENCY ANIMAL DISEASES Abstract ...
It is argued that while considerable development of animal health economics has occurred in recent d...
Animal health concerns are not new to agriculture. Animal health breakthroughs have been occurring w...
Emergency preparedness in the livestock industry can include events such as natural disasters, fire,...
Endemic disease of animals is an economic problem as it deprives humans of scarce resources that mig...
Emerging and transboundary diseases have been responsible for dramatic impacts on human health, the ...
The way that an economist and an animal health professional use economics differs and creates frustr...
This discussion paper is one of a series of six papers which brings together both cost-benefit analy...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Working Paper SMART-LERECO N° 11-05 The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long ...
Livestock production systems and the societies in which they are embedded face a set of risks presen...
The economics of emergency animal disease outbreak response is impacted by a range of factors, such ...
Biological emergencies such as the appearance of an exotic transboundary or emerging disease can bec...
Animal disease outbreaks either through deliberate terroristic act or accidental introductions prese...
A FRAMEWORK FOR ASSESSING THE TANGIBLE AND INTANGIBLE IMPACTS OF EMERGENCY ANIMAL DISEASES Abstract ...
It is argued that while considerable development of animal health economics has occurred in recent d...
Animal health concerns are not new to agriculture. Animal health breakthroughs have been occurring w...
Emergency preparedness in the livestock industry can include events such as natural disasters, fire,...
Endemic disease of animals is an economic problem as it deprives humans of scarce resources that mig...
Emerging and transboundary diseases have been responsible for dramatic impacts on human health, the ...
The way that an economist and an animal health professional use economics differs and creates frustr...
This discussion paper is one of a series of six papers which brings together both cost-benefit analy...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Risk classification of livestock farms can help stakeholders design and implement risk management me...
Working Paper SMART-LERECO N° 11-05 The economic consequences of livestock epidemics have been long ...