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Germ Wars

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The United States government has spent billions of dollars to prepare the nation for bioterrorism despite the extremely rare occurrence of biological attacks in modern American history. Germ Wars a...
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  • 17 January 2017
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The United States government has spent billions of dollars to prepare the nation for bioterrorism despite the extremely rare occurrence of biological attacks in modern American history. Germ Wars argues that bioterrorism has emerged as a prominent fear in the modern age, arising with the production of new forms of microbial nature and the changing practices of warfare. In the last century, revolutions in biological science have made visible a vast microscopic world, and in this same era we have watched the rise of a global war on terror.
 
Germ Wars demonstrates that these movements did not occur separately but are instead deeply entwined—new scientific knowledge of microbes makes possible new mechanisms of war. Whether to eliminate disease or create weapons, the work to harness and control germs and the history of these endeavors provide an important opportunity for investigating how biological natures shape modern life. Germ Wars aims to convince students and scholars as well as policymakers and activists that the ways in which bioterrorism has been produced have consequences for how people live in this world of unspecifiable risks.
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Price: $95.00
Pages: 304
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: Critical Environments: Nature, Science, and Politics
Publication Date: 17 January 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520292765
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

"The book is most suited for those who would describe their concern as that of the critical study of nature or of institutions. They may find it useful for their own work and graduate seminars, as the volume extends critiques of authority to understudied topics of biosecurity, adds an arrow to the quiver of assaults against neoliberalism, and engenders many questions for further study."
Melanie Armstrong is Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies and the Public Lands Coordinator at Western State Colorado University.
Introduction: Political Ecologies of Bioterror

1. “Smallpox Is Dead”: The Public Health Campaign to (Almost) Eradicate a Species
2. Microbes for War and Peace: On the Military Origins of Containment
3. The Wild Microbiological West: Fighting Ticks and Weighing Risks
4. Agents of Care: Bioterrorism Preparedness at the CDC
5. Simulation Science: Securing the Future
6. Bioterror Borderlands: Of Nature and Nation
Conclusion: “Freaked Out Yet?”

Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index