STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Angie Boyce
Harvard, Robert Wood Johnson Fellow

on

Chicken, Egg, or Cook? Foodborne Salmonellosis and Distributed Responsibility

Monday, September 22
12:15-2:00 pm
Room 100F, Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to via our 
online<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 
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 before Thursday morning, September 18.

Abstract:   How did we come to eat in the “farm-to-fork continuum,” living in a 
system/network of distributed risks and responsibilities?  This talk examines 
this question by focusing on foodborne salmonellosis in historical and 
comparative perspective.  I draw from STS work on the construction of risk 
objects and public problems to analyze foodborne salmonellosis, exploring 
struggles over what kinds of solutions (technical, organizational, social) 
should be implemented, and how different systems and networks of risk 
management have been built in different times and places.  More specifically, I 
will describe three episodes: 1) US salmonella control debates in the 1950s – 
1970s and a shift from eradication and feed control to risk reduction in 
processing and consumer education aimed at home kitchens; 2) different 
responses to a global pandemic of Salmonella serotype Enteritidis in shell eggs 
during the 1980s in the UK (poultry vaccination/farm control) and US (source 
tracing/flock management/egg washing); and 3) how Denmark’s Salmonella-free 
chicken program is being held up as a possible model for regulatory change in 
the US, especially in light of increasing public concerns about antibiotic 
resistance. Historical and comparative lenses help illuminate how alternative 
distributions of risk and responsibility, and system/network configurations, 
are possible.


Biography:   Angie Boyce is a 2014-2016 Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society 
Scholar at Harvard University.  She completed her Ph.D. in Science & Technology 
Studies at Cornell University.  Her research examines the enormous 
infrastructure required to make public health problems visible, controllable, 
and preventable.  Her dissertation was a historical and ethnographic study of 
how US public health and regulatory agencies built and used surveillance 
systems to make national outbreaks of foodborne disease legible, overcoming 
both the highly distributed nature of the industrialized food system and the 
fragmented federal system for governing health.  Boyce has also written about 
FDA food standards and consumer activism (forthcoming, Technology and Culture), 
as well as the relationship between social values and scientific and regulatory 
classifications in microbiome science (forthcoming, Science, Technology and 
Human Values).



A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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