This book explores a range of biohealth and biosecurity threats,
places them in context, and offers responses and solutions from
global and local, networked and pyramidal, as well as specialized
and interdisciplinary perspectives.
Specifically covering bioterrorism, emerging infectious
diseases, pandemic disease preparedness and remediation,
agroterroism, food safety, and environmental issues, the
contributors demonstrate that to counter terrorism of any kind, a
global, networked, and multidisciplinary approach is essential. To
be successful in biosecurity, this book argues it is necessary to
extend partnerships, cooperation, and co-ordination between public
health, clinical medicine, private business, law enforcement and
other agencies locally, nationally and internationally.
Internationally, a clear understanding is needed of what has
happened in past epidemics and what was accomplished in past
bioprograms (in Britain, South Africa, Russia, for example). This
book also assesses how, with the right technology and motivation,
both a state and a non-state actor could initiate an extremely
credible biothreat to security at both local and national
levels.
This book will be of much interest to students, researchers and
practitioners of security studies, public health, public policy and
IR in general.
Peter Katona is Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine at the
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA in Infectious Diseases. He
is co-founder of Biological Threat Mitigation, a bioterror
consulting firm.
John P. Sullivan is a lieutenant with the Los Angeles Sheriff's
Department. He is also a researcher focusing on terrorism, conflict
disaster, intelligence studies, and urban operations. He is
co-founder of the Los Angeles Terrorism Early Warning (TEW)
Group.
Michael D. Intriligator is Professor of Economics at the
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is also Professor
of Political Science, Professor of Public Policy in the School of
Public Policy and Social Research, and Co-Director of the Jacob
Marschak Interdisciplinary Colloquium on Mathematics in the
Behavioral Sciences, all at UCLA.
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