ABSTRACT

Globally, there has been a move away from national public sector vaccine development over the past 30 years. Immunization and States: The Politics of Making Vaccines explores vaccine geopolitics, analyzing why, and how this move happened, before looking at the ramifications in the context of Covid-19.

This unique book uses eight country studies – looking at Croatia, India, Iran, the Netherlands, Romania, Serbia, Spain, and Sweden – to explore the role of public sector vaccine institutes, past and present. Raising questions about national sovereignty, the erosion of multilateralism, and geopolitics, it also contributes to debates around public interest and privatization in the health sector. An extended introduction sets the chapters in an international context, whilst the epilogue looks forward to the future of vaccine development and production.

This is an important book for students, scholars, and practitioners with an interest in vaccine development from a range of fields, including public health, medicine, science and technology studies, history of medicine, politics, international relations, and the sociology of health and illness.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|24 pages

Politics of Vaccination in Sweden

The National Bacteriological Laboratory SBL (1909–1993) and current debates

chapter 4|21 pages

The Failed Promises of a Brighter Future

The Institute of Immunology in Zagreb from a public asset to a privatized burden

chapter 6|17 pages

Start with the World and Continue in Isolation

The Pasteur and Razi Institutes' Vaccine Legacy in Iran

chapter 7|21 pages

Translating Pasteur's Vision in Eastern Europe

The role of the Cantacuzino Institute in Romanian vaccination policies and vaccine production

chapter 8|23 pages

Vaccine Production in Serbia

Political and socio-cultural determinants in historical perspective

chapter |19 pages

Epilogue

States and vaccines in the age of Covid-19