Overview
- Editors:
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Eve Seguin
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Department of History, University of Aberdeen, UK
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Table of contents (8 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-xiii
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- Maj-Britt Juhl Poulsen, Hanne Andersen
Pages 4-37
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- Jérôme Segal, Eric Francoeur
Pages 99-134
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Back Matter
Pages 189-191
About this book
In recent years a number of scholars have analyzed the management of BSE, also known as 'mad cow disease'. The BSE crisis is regarded by many as an example of the failure of officials and politicians to handle risk situations. Yet, BSE is also characterized by a unique trait, that is, the infectious agent that causes it. Thus far, no one has paid attention to the fact that BSE and other transmissible spongiform encephalopathy's (TSEs) are allegedly caused by a novel agent - a prion - distinct from all other known infectious agents such as bacteria and viruses. The prion hypothesis was introduced by the American scientist Stanley Prusiner in 1982. It immediately created a controversy among scientists and is still rejected by some. Yet, despite this lack of consensus in the scientific community, Prusiner was awarded the Nobel Prize for medicine in 1997. This book analyzes the introduction, reception, development and consequences of the prion hypothesis. It shows that BSE is a unique case not only in virtue of its political mismanagement but also because its infectious agent has created a form of revolution in biology.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of History, University of Aberdeen, UK
Eve Seguin
About the editor
H. ANDERSEN Associate Professor, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
B. CHAMAK Researcher and Writer
K. DRESSEL Scientific Secretary, German TSE Research Platform, University of Munich, Germany
E. FRANCOEUR Lecturer, École de Technologie Supériere de Montréal, Canada
M. J. POULSEN Research Adviser, Health Care Sector, Frederiksborg County, Denmark
K. KIM Research Fellow, Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, University College, London, UK
J. SEGAL Assistant Professor, Institut Universitaire de Formation des Maitres, Paris, France