Dear Colleagues and friends

Hope you are keeping well. Please see below a link to some great resources for 
teaching and research from colleagues at the Sussex STEPS centre on 
sustainability about COVID-19 in the context of wider lessons on epidemics and 
pandemics.

Best wishes

Peter

Professor Peter Newell
Department of International Relations
School of Global Studies
University of Sussex
Brighton
BN1 9SN
UK

T: (0044) 1273 873159
E-mail: [email protected]


________________________________
From: Nathan Oxley <[email protected]>
Sent: 02 April 2020 10:05
Subject: Resources for COVID-19: Learning from epidemics & pandemics

Dear colleagues,

We have compiled a set of resources on COVID-19 in the context of wider lessons 
on epidemics and pandemics, covering about 13 years of research from the STEPS 
Centre.

It aims to inform responses to the current pandemic by highlighting 
up-to-the-minute reactions on COVID-19, as well as learning from relevant 
examples and experiences of how people have responded and prepared for past 
outbreaks of disease.

The work is collected here:
https://steps-centre.org/covid-19-coronavirus-resources-research-epidemics-pandemics/<https://steps-centre.org/covid-19-coronavirus-resources-research-epidemics-pandemics/>

(And see newsletter message below.)

Please do have a look and share it with others if you find it useful.

Many thanks,

Nathan Oxley
Communications, ESRC STEPS Centre



Begin forwarded message:
From: ESRC STEPS Centre <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: 2 April 2020 at 07:00:35 BST
To: <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Resources for COVID-19: Learning from epidemics & pandemics
Reply-To: ESRC STEPS Centre 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
A collection of resources on epidemics and pandemics, to inform responses to 
the COVID-19 outbreak.
View this email in your 
browser<https://mailchi.mp/steps-centre/steps-newsletter-3191189?e=c6e8e2bace>
COVID-19: Resources and research on epidemics and pandemics


A selection from 13 years of work in the ESRC STEPS Centre explores how people 
prepare for, and respond to, widespread outbreaks of disease.

The scale and spread of the COVID-19 novel coronavirus is unfamiliar. But there 
are many lessons from past experiences in how governments prepare (or fail to 
prepare) for pandemics, how societies respond to disease, the links between 
ecology and society, and how to make sense of uncertainties in science, policy 
making and everyday life.

Browse the 
resources<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b203b28673&e=c6e8e2bace>


Science, uncertainty and policy advice

[https://mcusercontent.com/9254a411e4220fde61f078a32/images/2e66b58d-23ac-4631-a1d3-5c50b8d26e0d.jpg]<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=dda504d9ea&e=c6e8e2bace>


Science of many kinds is a vital source of insight to shape policy and practice 
during epidemics. But perhaps more than any crisis in the recent past, COVID-19 
shows the many ways that science advice can be controversial in a 
fast-changing, uncertain situation with conflicting views. As past examples 
show, opening up science advice to scrutiny and participation can be 
challenging but useful in seeking alternative ways forward.

BLOG: Science, uncertainty and the COVID-19 
response<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=ca36539305&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, 16 March 2020

BLOG: Post-normal pandemics: Why COVID-19 requires a new approach to 
science<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=d8815a47e8&e=c6e8e2bace>
David Waltner-Toews, Annibale Biggeri, Bruna De Marchi, Silvio Funtowicz, Mario 
Giampietro, Martin O’Connor, Jerome R. Ravetz, Andrea Saltelli and Jeroen P. 
van der Sluijs, 25 March 2020

RESOURCES: Credibility Across 
Cultures<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=71149429fe&e=c6e8e2bace>
A selection of short filmed presentations and downloads from our 2013 symposium 
on the global politics of scientific advice.

JOURNAL ARTICLE: The social and political lives of zoonotic disease models: 
narratives, science and 
policy<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2a707ef5c2&e=c6e8e2bace>
Leach, M. and Scoones, I. (2013) Social Science and Medicine

JOURNAL ARTICLE: Keep it 
Complex<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=9bf9ccafae&e=c6e8e2bace>
In this Nature article from 2010, STEPS co-director Andy Stirling argues that 
scientific advice should acknowledge uncertainty and avoid closing down to 
single ‘definitive’ answers where none are possible.


Understanding epidemics and pandemics

[https://mcusercontent.com/9254a411e4220fde61f078a32/images/cff32aae-2cc8-42b2-a793-f9cda47b2cc5.jpg]


Epidemics have a complex and challenging life in society. Viral outbreaks bring 
together many different kinds of moving parts: viruses themselves, animals and 
people, health systems, food and transport, mutual support and livelihoods – 
and the many different everyday practices, conditions and ways of life that can 
make people more vulnerable or slow the spread of disease.

There are many places where state support is very limited, society is deeply 
unequal, and where social relations and livelihoods are fragile and vulnerable. 
Learning from local practices, building resilience from below, is essential for 
shaping the COVID-19 response.

Work on the ‘social life’ of epidemics has been central to STEPS Centre work 
since 2007, when research on the response to avian influenza in Southeast Asia 
began. This work has continued with research on swine flu and other zoonoses, 
and the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa (see this account of how our work on 
this theme progressed over 
time<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b9f1551295&e=c6e8e2bace>).

Our resources show the importance of social factors like the role of narratives 
in shaping action, the legitimacy of different kinds of authority and power, 
the impacts of deep-rooted inequality, diets and trade in animals, cultural 
traditions like burial and healthcare practices, and the difficulties of 
linking up global coordination and local action.

Podcast

PODCAST: The Social Dynamics of 
Pandemics<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2e0134cc3b&e=c6e8e2bace>
Between the Lines podcast, Institute of Development Studies, April 2020

In an episode recorded in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, this discussion 
between Ian Scoones, Melissa Leach, Hayley MacGregor and Annie Wilkinson 
explores lessons from the past for the current outbreak.

Comment pieces

BLOG: Living with coronavirus uncertainties: four lessons from 
pastoralists<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=8b27f0b8b7&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, 27 March 2020 (PASTRES blog)

BLOG: Surviving COVID-19 in a fragile state: why social resilience is 
essential<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=96f27d6a03&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, 27 March 2020 (African Arguments)

COMMENT: The lessons of swine 
flu<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=dfbc4f0cb7&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, The Guardian, 2009

Books

BOOK: Avian Influenza: Science, Policy and 
Politics<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=0ec396ec50&e=c6e8e2bace>
 (download a free sample chapter, or buy the book at half-price – use the 
discount code IDS50 until May 2020)
Edited by Ian Scoones

BOOK: Epidemics: Science, Governance and Social 
Justice<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=82814f0176&e=c6e8e2bace>
 (download a free sample chapter, or buy the book at half-price – use the 
discount code IDS50 until May 2020)
Edited by Sarah Dry and Melissa Leach

FREEBOOK: Pathways to Health and 
Sustainability<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=fea009e251&e=c6e8e2bace>
(compilation of book chapters, free download)

STEPS Working papers

The International Response to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza: Science, 
Policy and 
Politics<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=1b775c4b0f&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones and Paul Forster, 2008

Haemorrhagic Fevers in Africa: Narratives, Politics and Pathways of Disease and 
Response<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2e5f9f9e6a&e=c6e8e2bace>
Melissa Leach, 2008

Epidemics for all? Governing Health in a Global 
Age<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b014073fdc&e=c6e8e2bace>
Sarah Dry, 2008

Cambodia’s Victim Zero: Global and National Responses to Highly Pathogenic 
Avian 
Influenza<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=ade1dc4634&e=c6e8e2bace>
Sophal Ear, 2009

To Pandemic or Not? Reconfiguring Global Responses to 
Influenza<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=6593a559cf&e=c6e8e2bace>
Paul Forster, 2013

Journal articles

Governing epidemics in an age of complexity: Narratives, politics and pathways 
to 
sustainability<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=1f21634f85&e=c6e8e2bace>
Stirling, A.C., Scoones, I. and Leach, M. (2007), Global Environmental Change

>From Risk Assessment to Knowledge Mapping: Science, Precaution, and 
>Participation in Disease 
>Ecology<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=1a7ef47694&e=c6e8e2bace>
Stirling, A.C, and Scoones, I. (2009), Ecology and Society

Ebola: myths, realities and structural 
violence<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=dad5ce6549&e=c6e8e2bace>
Wilkinson, A. and Leach, M. (2014), African Affairs

Engaging ‘communities’: anthropological insights from the West African Ebola 
epidemic<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=6018ef390d&e=c6e8e2bace>
Wilkinson, A., Parker, M., Martineau, F. and Leach, M. (2017), Philosophical 
Transactions of the Royal Society B

Pandemic Flu Controversies

A workshop in 
2013<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=f7bed7a498&e=c6e8e2bace>
 co-hosted by the STEPS Centre and the Centre for Global Health Policy, 
University of Sussex, this event brought together experts in global health 
policy with experience of preparing for and dealing with disease outbreaks.

REPORT: Pandemic Flu Controversies: What have we learned? Reflections from a 
workshop to discuss lessons, policy implications and future 
challenges<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=4fdc58a1e1&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, Melissa Leach and Stefan Elbe, 2013

COMMENT: Pandemic Flu Controversies: What have we 
learned?<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b76d867b5a&e=c6e8e2bace>
Ian Scoones, January 2013

VIDEO: Pandemic Flu 
Controversies<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=5ebd32b8da&e=c6e8e2bace>
Playlist of short comments from expert researchers at the workshop


Zoonoses: drivers of disease

[https://mcusercontent.com/9254a411e4220fde61f078a32/images/d5cb30b7-d8b3-4880-a795-a8092ec5d058.jpg]


Most human disease outbreaks originate in animals – so-called ‘zoonotic’ 
diseases. This is the case with COVID-19, SARS, avian flu, swine flu and Ebola. 
Collaborative work on the drivers of zoonotic disease in Africa has been 
central to the STEPS Centre’s work.

>From 2012 to 2016, the Dynamic Drivers of Disease in Africa consortium 
>(DDDAC)<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=a1e1513aa4&e=c6e8e2bace>
> studied the relationships between ecosystems, zoonoses, health and wellbeing, 
>through research in five African countries on four zoonotic diseases (see this 
>multimedia 
>story<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=f7dcf3af0b&e=c6e8e2bace>
> on how the programme worked). This includes looking at the political economy 
>of research and action on zoonoses – the motivations and power that shape the 
>decisions about what to fund, which questions to ask and how people respond to 
>emerging diseases.

The Dynamic Drivers programme produced an open access special issue of the 
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, ‘One Health for a Changing 
World: zoonoses, ecosystems and human 
well-being’<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=9552d92ab1&e=c6e8e2bace>,
 in 2017.

Articles from the issue:

  *   One Health for a changing world: new perspectives from 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=c9cba01ff3&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Local disease–ecosystem–livelihood dynamics: reflections from comparative 
case studies in 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=ad84b77a26&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   One Health contributions towards more effective and equitable approaches 
to health in low- and middle-income 
countries<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=025244d222&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Poor livestock keepers: ecosystem–poverty–health 
interactions<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=33d4d8d624&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   One Health, emerging infectious diseases and wildlife: two decades of 
progress?<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=e575cf7c3d&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Views from many worlds: unsettling categories in interdisciplinary 
research on endemic zoonotic 
diseases<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=3ffbff2311&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Facility-based surveillance for emerging infectious diseases; diagnostic 
practices in rural West African hospital settings: observations from 
Ghana<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=77c083255f&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Structural drivers of vulnerability to zoonotic disease in 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2f462a8b78&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Integrative modelling for One Health: pattern, process and 
participation<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b917b23370&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Spatial, seasonal and climatic predictive models of Rift Valley fever 
disease across 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=ade9cc28f9&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Zoonoses, One Health and complexity: wicked problems and constructive 
conflict<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=6253fa72bb&e=c6e8e2bace>
  *   Engaging research with policy and action: what are the challenges of 
responding to zoonotic disease in 
Africa?<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2d2eeffbdd&e=c6e8e2bace>

Other publications

BOOK: One Health: Science, Politics and Zoonotic Disease in 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=fbfc3bec45&e=c6e8e2bace>
 (download a free sample chapter, or buy the book at half-price – use the 
discount code IDS50 until May 2020) edited by Kevin Bardosh

JOURNAL ARTICLE: Zoonotic diseases: who gets sick, and why? Explorations from 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=4ada650d32&e=c6e8e2bace>
Vupenyu Dzingirai, Bernard Bett, Sally Bukachi, Elaine Lawson, Lindiwe 
Mangwanya, Ian Scoones, Linda Waldman, Annie Wilkinson, Melissa Leach and Tom 
Winnebah (2016) Critical Public Health

JOURNAL ARTICLE: The social and political lives of zoonotic disease models: 
Narratives, science and 
policy<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=b4cf412742&e=c6e8e2bace>
Leach, M. and Scoones, I. (2013) Social Science & Medicine

RESOURCES: One Health and the Real 
World<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=20c0ac2b86&e=c6e8e2bace>
Video, slides and commentary from an international symposium organised by the 
Dynamic Drivers of Disease in Africa programme

WEBSITE: Disease Scenarios 
Africa<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=02cbac15b2&e=c6e8e2bace>
Interactive maps showing how multiple drivers of disease affect each other in 
different countries, plus a set of possible storylines on possible futures for 
disease in Africa, under different conditions.


Other resources

  *   Social Science in Humanitarian Action – updates on the novel COVID-19 
outbreak<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=25abe0c677&e=c6e8e2bace>
 A roundup of recent social science on COVID-19, part of a website with wider 
resources on evidence for disasters and emergencies.

  *   The Epidemic Response Anthropology 
Platform<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=eb869ded54&e=c6e8e2bace>
Showcases evidence from anthropologists and other social scientists around the 
world to provide insight, analysis and advice, to inform epidemic response 
efforts.

  *   COVID-19 – the social science response to the 
pandemic<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=2fdf92f21b&e=c6e8e2bace>
Growing round-up of resources, links and responses from the Institute of 
Development Studies.


NATURES: Our theme for 2020

[https://mcusercontent.com/9254a411e4220fde61f078a32/images/28fbb129-3c99-458d-b832-9875b3368c4c.png]<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=bada880903&e=c6e8e2bace>


Nature is all around us, but there are many ways of seeing different kinds of 
‘natures’, and many efforts to involve it in forms of control or domination.

How is talk of crisis shaping nature and people’s views of it? How can colonial 
forms of knowledge, technology and power be challenged, and what might it mean 
to ‘decolonize’ the study of environmental change? What do alternatives look 
like, and how can we explore, nurture, imagine and live the relationships we 
might want for the future?

Read 
more<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=5b910080fa&e=c6e8e2bace>


About STEPS


The ESRC STEPS Centre (Social, Technological and Environmental Pathways to 
Sustainability) is a research centre hosted by the Institute of Development 
Studies (IDS) and the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) at the University of 
Sussex, UK. We are supported by a grant from the UK's Economic and Social 
Research Council.

The STEPS Centre is part of the Pathways to Sustainability Global 
Consortium<https://steps-centre.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9254a411e4220fde61f078a32&id=5e2bd8e822&e=c6e8e2bace>,
 which includes hubs in Africa, China, Europe, Latin America, North America and 
South Asia.


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You are receiving this email because of your contact with the STEPS Centre or 
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