Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management

Global anxieties about avian influenza stem from a growing recognition that highly-virulent, highly-mobile disease vectors infiltrate human spaces in ways that are difficult to perceive, and even more difficult to manage. This article analyses a participatory health intervention in Việt Nam to explo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Natalie Porter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Duke University Press 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://environmentalhumanities.org/arch/vol1/EH1.7.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e 2023-05-15T15:34:20+02:00 Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management Natalie Porter 2012-11-01 http://environmentalhumanities.org/arch/vol1/EH1.7.pdf https://doaj.org/article/04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e en eng Duke University Press 2201-1919 http://environmentalhumanities.org/arch/vol1/EH1.7.pdf https://doaj.org/article/04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e undefined Environmental Humanities, Vol 1, Pp 103-121 (2012) anthro-se socio Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2012 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:50:50Z Global anxieties about avian influenza stem from a growing recognition that highly-virulent, highly-mobile disease vectors infiltrate human spaces in ways that are difficult to perceive, and even more difficult to manage. This article analyses a participatory health intervention in Việt Nam to explore how avian influenza threats challenge long-held understandings of animals’ place in the environment and society. In this intervention, poultry farmers collaborated with health workers to illustrate maps of avian flu risks in their communities. Participant-observation of the risk-mapping exercises shows that health workers treated poultry as commodities, and located these animals in environments that could be transformed and dominated by humans. However, these maps did not sufficiently represent the physical and social landscapes where humans and poultry coexist in Việt Nam. As such, farmers located poultry in environments dominated by risky nonhuman forces such as winds, waterways, and other organisms. I argue that these divergent risk maps demonstrate how ecological factors, interpersonal networks, and global market dynamics combine to engender a variety of interspecies relationships, which in turn shape the location of disease risks in space. I develop the term risky zoographies to signal the emergence of competing descriptions of animals and their habitats in zoonotic disease contexts. This concept suggests that as wild animals, livestock products, and microbial pathogens continue to globalise, place-based health interventions that limit animals to particular locales are proving inadequate. Risky zoographies signal the inextricability of nonhuman animals from human spaces, and reveal interspecies interactions that transect and transcend environments. Article in Journal/Newspaper Avian flu Unknown
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language English
topic anthro-se
socio
spellingShingle anthro-se
socio
Natalie Porter
Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
topic_facet anthro-se
socio
description Global anxieties about avian influenza stem from a growing recognition that highly-virulent, highly-mobile disease vectors infiltrate human spaces in ways that are difficult to perceive, and even more difficult to manage. This article analyses a participatory health intervention in Việt Nam to explore how avian influenza threats challenge long-held understandings of animals’ place in the environment and society. In this intervention, poultry farmers collaborated with health workers to illustrate maps of avian flu risks in their communities. Participant-observation of the risk-mapping exercises shows that health workers treated poultry as commodities, and located these animals in environments that could be transformed and dominated by humans. However, these maps did not sufficiently represent the physical and social landscapes where humans and poultry coexist in Việt Nam. As such, farmers located poultry in environments dominated by risky nonhuman forces such as winds, waterways, and other organisms. I argue that these divergent risk maps demonstrate how ecological factors, interpersonal networks, and global market dynamics combine to engender a variety of interspecies relationships, which in turn shape the location of disease risks in space. I develop the term risky zoographies to signal the emergence of competing descriptions of animals and their habitats in zoonotic disease contexts. This concept suggests that as wild animals, livestock products, and microbial pathogens continue to globalise, place-based health interventions that limit animals to particular locales are proving inadequate. Risky zoographies signal the inextricability of nonhuman animals from human spaces, and reveal interspecies interactions that transect and transcend environments.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Natalie Porter
author_facet Natalie Porter
author_sort Natalie Porter
title Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
title_short Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
title_full Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
title_fullStr Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
title_full_unstemmed Risky Zoographies: The Limits of Place in Avian Flu Management
title_sort risky zoographies: the limits of place in avian flu management
publisher Duke University Press
publishDate 2012
url http://environmentalhumanities.org/arch/vol1/EH1.7.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_source Environmental Humanities, Vol 1, Pp 103-121 (2012)
op_relation 2201-1919
http://environmentalhumanities.org/arch/vol1/EH1.7.pdf
https://doaj.org/article/04d216c209574aa2b0b33b26b23f331e
op_rights undefined
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