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Recent epidemics have prompted large-scale international
interventions, aimed at mitigating the spread of disease in a
globalized world. During a crisis, however, global health actions -
including planning and organizing, communicating about risk, and
cost-benefit evaluations - aren't usually part of a single,
integrated global response. Arguing that an uncoordinated approach
can be challenged by local conditions and expectations, generating
a wide range of resistance and difficulties, this volume provides
important insights for future outbreak management and global health
governance. Drawing on experiences with A(H1N1) and Ebola virus
disease, the book is divided into three parts looking at how
responses to global health crises have developed, lessons learned
from particular pandemics and the ethical implications of our
management of them. Individual chapters focus on, among other
issues, financing, cost-benefit analysis, matrix management, risk
communication and organizational strategies. Taking a social
science perspective, this valuable book outlines the current state
of global health emergency responses and explores ways in which
they can be improved. It is a useful read for academics and
practitioners interested in global health, the sociology of health
and illness, health economics and emergency management.
Rules and procedures are key features for a modern organization to
function. It is no surprise to see them to be paramount in safety
management. As some sociologists argue, routine and rule following
is not always socially resented. It can bring people comfort and
reduce anxieties of newness and uncertainty. Facing constant
unexpected events entails fatigue and exhaustion. There is also no
doubt that proceduralization and documented activities have brought
progress, avoided recurrent mistakes and allowed for 'best
practices' to be adopted. However, it seems that the exclusive and
intensive use of procedures today is in fact a threat to new
progress in safety. There is an urgent need to consider this issue
because there is doubt that the path chosen by many hazardous
industries and activities is the most effective, safety wise,
considering the safety level achieved today. As soon as safety is
involved, there seems to be an irresistible push towards a wider
scope of norms, procedures and processes, whatever the context
implied. This book is not a plea against proceduralization, but it
does take the view that it is time to reassess how far it can still
go and to what benefit. Underlying these questions, there is a
growing suspicion that the path taken might in fact lead to a dead
end, unless the concept of procedure and the conditions under which
these procedures are developed are revisited.
This book addresses the issues and methods involved in governing
risks posed by genetically modified (GM) agriculture. It examines
the evolution of policies intended to ensure the safety of GM crops
and food products in the United States and Europe and the
regulatory approaches and other social controls employed to protect
human health, the environment, conventional farming and foods, and
the interests and rights of consumers. Discussion encompasses the
cultural, political, and economic forces that shape the design and
application of the methods of risk governance, as well as other
contextual features such as the influence of multinational
companies seeking acceptance of their GM ventures. This discussion
also examines the influence of the dynamic public discourse
fostered by progressive concepts of risk governance and the
approaches taken to meet its demands for transparency, public
participation, and appropriate consideration of public perceptions
and values despite conflicting views of experts.
This book addresses the issues and methods involved in governing
risks posed by genetically modified (GM) agriculture. It examines
the evolution of policies intended to ensure the safety of GM crops
and food products in the United States and Europe and the
regulatory approaches and other social controls employed to protect
human health, the environment, conventional farming and foods, and
the interests and rights of consumers. Discussion encompasses the
cultural, political, and economic forces that shape the design and
application of the methods of risk governance, as well as other
contextual features such as the influence of multinational
companies seeking acceptance of their GM ventures. This discussion
also examines the influence of the dynamic public discourse
fostered by progressive concepts of risk governance and the
approaches taken to meet its demands for transparency, public
participation, and appropriate consideration of public perceptions
and values despite conflicting views of experts.
The conventional approach to risk communication, based on a
centralized and controlled model, has led to blatant failures in
the management of recent safety related events. In parallel,
several cases have proved that actors not thought of as risk
governance or safety management contributors may play a positive
role regarding safety. Building on these two observations and
bridging the gap between risk communication and safety practices
leads to a new, more societal perspective on risk communication,
that allows for smart risk governance and safety management. This
book is Open Access under a CC-BY licence.
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