Copy to clipboardCopy Heymann, David; (2003) The Evolving Infectious Disease Threat: Implications for national and global security. Journal of Human Development, 4 (2). pp. 191-207. ISSN 1464-9888 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1464988032000087541
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Copy to clipboardCopyhttps://doi.org/10.1080/1464988032000087541
© 2003, Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. : This paper discusses the ways in which the sharply increased danger of bio-terrorism has made infectious diseases a priority in defence and intelligence circles. Against this background, the author sets out a central principle of global public health security: a strengthened capacity to detect and contain naturally caused outbreaks is the only rational way to defend the world against the threat of a bio-terrorist attack. He then discusses the three trends that underscore this point: vulnerability of all nations to epidemics, the capacity of a disease such as AIDS to undermine government and society, and the way in which the determinants of national security have been re-defined in the post-Cold War era.
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