Biosecurity after the Event: Risk Politics and Animal Disease
Open Access
- 1 July 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 40 (7) , 1552-1567
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a4056
Abstract
This paper examines the politics of agricultural biosecurity in the UK, following the 2001 epidemic of foot and mouth disease. Biosecurity politics epitomise the ‘risk politics’ of animal disease, which acts antipolitically by focusing on problem-solving mechanisms and shutting down spaces for debate and dissent. By following biosecurity through three sites, various inconsistencies of this politics are described. On farms, biosecurity is seen as a routine and regulated practice that is more novel discursively than it is materially. In parliamentary and policy discourse, biosecurity is caught between a prescriptive regulatory logic tied to on-farm practices and a more open rhetorical construction which links it to a wider range of affairs of state (such as security, the national border, the public interest). At the science–policy interface, biosecurity politics enacts divisions not only between the roles of science and politics, but also between types of science. An event-based appreciation of risk and contingency highlights the need to unlock the problem-making potential inherent in these various inconsistencies and connections, a role which should be undertaken by social scientists working with others. The aim of this problem making should be a better constructed biosecurity through good biosecurity science.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Flexible Boundaries in Biosecurity: Accommodating Gorse inAotearoaNew ZealandEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2008
- Biopolitics and the molecularization of lifeCultural Geographies, 2007
- Bees, Butterflies, and Bacteria: Biotechnology and the Politics of Nonhuman FriendshipEnvironment and Planning A: Economy and Space, 2006
- Biosecurity: Towards an anthropology of the contemporaryAnthropology Today, 2004
- The Right Tool for the Job? Modeling, Spatial Relationships, and Styles of Scientific Practice in the UK Foot and Mouth CrisisEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 2004
- Surveilling Strange Materialities: Categorisation in the Evolving Geographies of FMD BiosecurityEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 2004
- Environmental issues: relational ontologies and hybrid politicsProgress in Human Geography, 2003
- Virus-crisis-institutional Change: the Foot and Mouth Actor Network and the Governance of Rural Affairs in the UKSociologia Ruralis, 2002
- Technology, politics and the market: an interview with Michel CallonEconomy and Society, 2002
- The anti-political economyEconomy and Society, 2002