Syllabus/achievement requirements

  • Benton, A. (2017) “Whose Security? Militarization and Securitization During West Africa’s Ebola Outbreak” in Michiel Hofman & Sokhieng Au, The Politics of Fear. Médecins Sans Frontières and the West African Ebola Epidemic, Oxford University Press, :25-50
  • de Bengy Puyvallee, A. (2018). "Norway's Response to Ebola: Balancing  Altruistic and Security Concerns." Internasjonal politikk 76(1): 105-120.
  • de Bengy Puyvallee, A., S. K. Kittelsen and K. T. Storeng (2018). "Crisis! How emergency preparedness logic changes global health policy." Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association 138(16), :1-7.
  • Erikson, S. L. (2018). "Cell Phones ≠ Self and Other Problems with Big Data Detection and Containment during Epidemics." Medical Anthropology Quarterly 32(3): 315-339.
  • Fortner, R. and A. Park (2017). Bill Gates won't save you from the next Ebola. Huffington Post, 30.04.2017
  • Freundenthal, E. (2019). “Ebola’s lost blood: row over samples flown out of Africa as ‘big pharma’ set to cash in”, The Telegraph; 06.02.2019, :1-11
  • Kamradt-Scott, A. (2016). "WHO’s to blame? The World Health Organization and the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa." Third World Quarterly 37(3): 401-418.
  • King, N. B. (2002). "Security, Disease, Commerce: Ideologies of Postcolonial Global Health." Social Studies of Science 32(5/6): 763-789.
  • Lakoff, A. (2017). Unprepared. Global Health in a time of emergency, University of California Press, 231p
  • McInnes, C. (2016). "Crisis! What crisis? Global health and the 2014–15 West African Ebola outbreak." Third World Quarterly 37(3): 380-400.
  • MSF (2019) “Open letter to CEPI Board Members: Revise CEPI’s access policy”, 05.03.2019; :1-2
  • Nunes, J. (2017) “Doctors Against Borders: Médecins Sans Frontières and Global Health Security”, in Michiel Hofman & Sokhieng Au, The Politics of Fear. Médecins Sans Frontières and the West African Ebola Epidemic, Oxford University Press, :1-24
  • Parker et al (2019). "Ebola and Public Authority: Saving Loved Ones in Sierra Leone." Medical Anthropology: 1-15.
  • Roemer-Mahler, A. and S. Elbe (2016). "The race for Ebola drugs: pharmaceuticals, security and global health governance." Third World Quarterly 37(3): 487-506.
  • Rushton, S. (2011). "Global Health Security: Security for Whom? Security from What?" Political Studies 59(4): 779-796.
  • Shepler, S. (2017). "“We Know Who is Eating the Ebola Money!”: Corruption, the State, and the Ebola Response." Anthropological Quarterly 90(2): 451-473
  • Stein, F. and D. Sridhar (2017). "Health as a “global public good”: creating a market for pandemic risk." BMJ 358: j3397 :1-4
  • Wilkinson, A. and M. Leach (2014). "Briefing: Ebola–myths, realities, and structural violence." African Affairs 114(454): 136-148

Total: 499 pages (500 max)

Published Jan. 8, 2020 11:31 AM - Last modified Apr. 27, 2020 7:47 PM