Accueil/ expose
Biological Risks and Global Health Security in the 21st Century
mercredi 15 novembre 2017

Loading the player...
Descriptif

Conférence donnée par Stephan Elbe dans le cadre de la Chaire Géopolitique du Risque organisée par le département de Géographie de l'ENS.

Can a pill strengthen national security? The suggestion may seem odd, but governments around the world have come to believe precisely that. Several states now consider the ability to rapidly develop new medicines and vaccines as critical to their national security. In an interconnected world, security is no longer about armed force alone; it also entails protecting populations against a spectrum of biological risks. The spread of a new pandemic, a bioterrorist attack, or even an accidental laboratory release could all cause mass deaths, crippling economic shocks, and widespread societal disruption. Governments are therefore trying to work more closely with companies to develop new pharmaceutical defenses – or ‘medical countermeasures’ – to better protect their populations against such threats. Yet the quest to secure populations pharmaceutically is proving fiendishly difficult to implement in practice. It is also generating a maelstrom of policy dilemmas and controversies along the way: Why is it so difficult to develop new medical countermeasures against deadly – but also highly unpredictable – diseases? How do the power dynamics play out between pharmaceutical companies, governments and other actors in this quest? Will authorities ever get to a point where they can rapidly make new medicines available in response to dangerous outbreaks? This talk explores the growing entanglement of pharmaceuticals and security through an in-depth study of the world’s most prominent medical countermeasure – Tamiflu.

Voir aussi


  • Biological Risks in the 21st Century
    Stefan Elbe
  • La gouvernementalité algorithmique ou l'...
    Antoinette Rouvroy
  • Is the World Less Risky with Trump in Ch...
    Mark Blyth
  • La société de l'incertitude
    Magali Reghezza-Zitt
  • Rights to do grave wrong
    Mark Osiel
  • Insurance and war: a modern politics of ...
    Luis Lobo-Guerrero
  • Mondialisation, conspirationnisme et rel...
    Haoues Seniguer
  • Biological Risks in the 21st Century
    Stefan Elbe
  • Toward a Postcolonial Theory of the Poli...
    Ranabir Samaddar
  • L’interdisciplinarité dans les recherche...
    Frédéric Worms, Frédéric Keck, Florence Weber, Jean-Pierre Dupuy, Francis Chateauraynaud, Sylvie Taussig, Christian Thimann, Raphaëlle Nollez-Goldbach, Amélie De Montchalin
  • Inauguration de la Chaire Géopolitique d...
    Marc Mézard, Peter Burgess
  • Qu’est-ce que la « géopolitique du risqu...
    Peter Burgess
  • Insuring life - Value, Security and ris...
    Luis Lobo-Guerrero
  • Risk and uncertainly
    Karen Lund Petersen
  • Regard du juriste sur la gestion d'un ri...
    Jean-Sylvestre Bergé
  • Crise et incertitude(s)
    Magali Reghezza-Zitt
  • Des sentinelles pour l'environnement : l...
    Frédéric Keck
  • Becoming indigenous: how to live with ri...
    Julian Reid
  • The chain of security
    Marieke De Goede
  • Éducation à l'incertitude ?
    Frédéric Worms, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem
  • Epidémies globalisées dans les Suds : gé...
    Marine Al Dahdah, Jean-Benoît Falisse, Grégoire Lurton
Auteur(s)
Stefan Elbe
Université du Sussex
Chercheur

Plus sur cet auteur
Voir la fiche de l'auteur

Cursus :

Professeur de relations internationales, Stefan Elbe est directeur du Centre pour la politique mondiale de la santé à l'Université du Sussex.

Cliquer ICI pour fermer
Annexes
Téléchargements :
   - Télécharger la vidéo
   - Télécharger l'audio (mp3)

Dernière mise à jour : 03/04/2018