ABSTRACT

This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the assessment and management of potentially dangerous infectious diseases, quarantined pests, invasive (alien) species, living modified organisms and biological weapons, from a multitude of perspectives.

Issues of biosecurity have gained increasing attention over recent years but have often only been addressed from narrow disciplines and with a lack of integration of theoretical and practical approaches. The Routledge Handbook of Biosecurity and Invasive Species brings together both the natural sciences and the social sciences for a fully rounded perspective on biosecurity, shedding light on current national and international management frameworks with a mind to assessing possible future scenarios. With chapters focussing on a variety of ecosystems – including forests, islands, marine and coastal and agricultural land – as well as from the industrial scale to individual gardens, this handbook reviews the global state of invasions and vulnerabilities across a wide range of themes and critically analyses key threats and threatening activities, such as trade, travel, land development and climate change.

Identifying invasive species and management techniques from a regional to international scale, this book will be a key reference text for a wide range of students and academics in ecology, agriculture, geography, human and animal health and interdisciplinary environmental and security studies.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Spatial tensions and divides in grappling with ‘invasive life’

part 1|89 pages

Knowledges

chapter 3|11 pages

Indigenous Biosecurity

Past, present and future

chapter 5|13 pages

Watching the Grass Grow

How landholders learn to live with an invasive plant in conditions of uncertainty

part 2|137 pages

Terrains

chapter 8|14 pages

Island Ecosystems

part 3|101 pages

Practices

chapter 15|18 pages

National Biosecurity Regimes

Plant and animal biopolitics in the UK and China

chapter 18|21 pages

The Emergency Modality

From the use of figures to the mobilisation of affects

chapter 20|16 pages

Rewilding and Invasion