4.0 Article

Rationality, Risk and Response: A Research Agenda for Biosecurity

Journal

BIOSOCIETIES
Volume 1, Issue 4, Pages 453-464

Publisher

PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
DOI: 10.1017/S1745855206004066

Keywords

biosecurity; bioterrorism; political rationalities; risk; thought communities

Funding

  1. LSE Research Committee

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This article considers how threats become constituted as problems requiring policy responses, and how one might account for such problematizations and responses. Focusing specifically on the threat from bioterrorism, it draws on a broadly constructivist approach to risk, and highlights how ideas around political rationalities, styles of thought, forms of risk and frameworks of knowledge can be useful in thinking about emerging biosecurity policies. It suggests that a comparative study of Britain and the United States might help to clarify how the threat of bioterrorism is being constructed by various groups, how support for particular 'framings' of the threat is being mobilized and taken up in policy networks, and how this is linked to different courses of action in response to the possibility of bioterrorism.

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