What makes an acute emergency? Temporal manifestation patterns and global health emergencies
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29374Date
2023-06-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In this article, we consider the role that onset patterns play in shaping
how acute global events are taken to be, drawing on illustrative cases
from the field of global health emergencies. We identify four temporal
manifestation patterns that we argue display distinct political dynamics.
First, an emergent onset pattern (e.g. the H1N1 health emergency), with
political dynamics dominated by novelty-induced uncertainty and lack
of information as well as familiar analogies. Second, an anticipatory
onset pattern (e.g. the risk of a global avian flu health emergency), with
a political dynamic characterised by dread of an as-of-yet unrealised
high-consequence risk. Third, a cyclical onset pattern (e.g. Ebola), with
a political dynamic characterised by a sense of familiarity and expectedness, unless eventual ‘unexpected’ or ‘unprecedented’ aspects manifest themselves. Lastly, a perpetual onset pattern (e.g. antimicrobial
resistance), with political dynamics characterised by incrementalism
and low political salience. We argue that acuteness is often associated
with a departure from expected manifestation patterns, such as an
escalation or other traits that make events appear unfamiliar. Whilst
drawing on global health emergences in this paper, the four categories
theorised here may also be used on a range of other adversities at the
global or local level.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisCitation
Staupe, Rubin. What makes an acute emergency? Temporal manifestation patterns and global health emergencies. Third World Quarterly. 2023Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2023 The Author(s)