Mads Barbesgaard
Senior lecturer
Dangerous Liaisons : Unveiling the Co-Constitution of Emerging Infectious Diseases and Industrial Meat Production
Author
Summary, in English
Outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) have intensified over the last decade, spotlighting the concept of “epicentre” as a means of locating disease origins. Although epicentre thinking can facilitate rapid interventions, it often overlooks the political-economic and ecological forces driving outbreaks. Drawing on critical geography, political ecology, and global supply chain analyses, we reconceptualise the epicentre as “a set of relations rather than a place”, emphasising how capitalist production, ecological disruption, and pathogen circulation intersect. From this relational standpoint, epicentres emerge as intersections of multiple capitals, rather than isolated points. Using HPAI in global poultry production as an illustration, we argue that biosecurity measures shaped by epicentre thinking often bolster industrial expansion while deflecting systemic critique. We conclude with a five-point research agenda for a relational geographical approach to disease outbreaks, highlighting turnover times, cost and risk distribution, producer incorporation, labour regimes, and governance mechanisms.
Department/s
- Department of Human Geography
Publishing year
2025
Language
English
Pages
1320-1341
Publication/Series
Antipode
Volume
57
Issue
4
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Topic
- Human Geography
Keywords
- agrarian change
- development
- epicentre
- global circuits of capital
- poultry production
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0066-4812