More-than-One Health: Humans, Animals, and the Environment Post-COVID

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This edited volume examines the complex entanglements of human, animal, and environmental health. It assembles leading scholars from the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and medicine to explore existing One Health approaches and to envision a mode of health that is both more-than-human and also more sensitive to, and explicit about, colonial and neocolonial legacies―urging the decolonization of One Health.

While acknowledging the importance of One Health, the volume at the same time critically examines its roots, highlighting the structural biases and power dynamics still at play in this global health regime. The volume is distinctive in its geographic breadth. It travels from Inuit sled dogs in the Arctic to rock hyraxes in Jerusalem, from black-faced spoonbills in Taiwan to street dogs in India, from spittle-bugs on Mallorca’s almond trees to jellyfish management at sea, and from rabies in sub-Saharan Africa to massive culling practices in South Korea. Together, the contributors call for One Health to move toward a more transparent, plural, and just perception of health that takes seriously the role of more-than-humans and of nonscientific knowledges, pointing to ways in which One Health can―and should―be decolonized.

This volume will appeal to researchers and practitioners in the medical humanities, posthumanities, environmental humanities, science and technology studies, animal studies, multispecies ethnography, anthrozoology, and critical public health.

The Open Access version of chapter 1, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781003294085, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license. Funded by the Wellcome Trust.

Author(s): Irus Braverman (editor)
Series: Routledge Studies in Environment and Health
Publisher: Routledge/Earthscan
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 321
City: London

Cover
Endorsement Page
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Contributors
Acknowledgements
Foreword. The Lure of One Health
Introduction. More-than-One Health, More-than-One Governance
Part I. Situating One Health: Histories and Practice
Chapter 1 One Health: A “More-than-Human” History
Chapter 2 The Case for a One Health Approach from a Physician’s Perspective
Chapter 3 Spillover Interfaces from Wuhan to Wall Street: An Interview with Chris Walzer
Chapter 4 One Health, Surveillance, and the Pandemic Treaty: An Interview with John H. Amuasi
Part II. Expanding One Health: Beyond the Human‑Animal-Environment Triad
Chapter 5 Between Healthy and Degraded Oceans: Promising Human Health through Marine Biomedicine
Chapter 6 More-than-Almonds: Plant Disease and the Politics of Care
Chapter 7 What Can Graphic Medicine Contribute to One Health?
Part III. Othering One Health: Toward Multibeing Justice
Chapter 8 The One Health Initiative and a Deeper Engagement with Animal Health and Wellbeing: Moving Away From Animal Agriculture
Chapter 9 Can Camaraderie Help Us Do Better than Compassion and Love for Nonhuman Health? Some Musings on One Health Inspired by the Case of Rabies in India
Chapter 10 Anthrodependency, Zoonoses, and Relational Spillover
Part IV. Decolonizing One Health: Toward Postcolonial and Indigenous Knowledges
Chapter 11 Birds as Sentinels of the Environment in Hong Kong and Taiwan
Chapter 12 The Spatialization of Diseases: Transferring Risk onto Vulnerable Beings
Chapter 13 Rabies on Ice: Learning from Interspecies Suffering in Arctic Canada
Afterword. Among Animals, and More: One Health Otherwise
Index