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[ATHENA] CFP « The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture", 4th EURHO Conference, Paris Septembre 2019


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  • From: Delphine Berdah <delphine.berdah AT u-psud.fr>
  • To: athena AT services.cnrs.fr
  • Subject: [ATHENA] CFP « The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture", 4th EURHO Conference, Paris Septembre 2019
  • Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2019 08:38:10 +0000 (GMT)
  • Authentication-results: t2gpsmtp1.dsi.cnrs.fr (amavisd-new); dkim=pass (1024-bit key) header.d=u-psud.fr

Chers collègues,

 

Vous trouverez ci-joint un appel à communications pour la prochaine conférence de l’EURHO (European Rural History Organisation) concernant le panel « The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture : New perspectives on, and approaches to health, breeding and production post-1945 ».

Cette conférence internationale aura lieu à l’EHESS, Paris, du 10 au 13 septembre 2019 et se déroulera en anglais.

 

L’argumentaire du panel, en anglais, est en pièce jointe.
Vous pourrez trouver la présentation complète de l'évènement, ainsi que toute
information utile sur le site dédié :
http://ruralhistory2019.ehess.fr/

 

Les propositions de communication (300 mots maximum) doivent être déposées au
plus tard le 31 janvier 2018
sur le site internet du colloque, après s’être authentifié (ou avoir créé un compte d’utilisateur), en sélectionnant le panel (topic) 231430 (Karen Sayer) :
https://eurhoparis2019.sciencesconf.org/user/submit

 

 

Bien cordialement,

 

Karen Sayer (Leeds Trinity University), Abigail Woods (King’s College London) et Delphine Berdah (Université Paris-Sud / Université Paris Saclay).



 

 

Dear Colleagues,

 

We are pleased to welcome contributions for the EURHO (European Rural History Organisation) 4th Conference in Paris, September 10-13, 2019, for the Panel « The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture : New perspectives on, and approaches to health, breeding and production post-1945 ».

 

A complete description of the panel is attached and below.

A complete description of the conference and of any other required information is on the conference website:

http://ruralhistory2019.ehess.fr/

 

Abstracts (up to 300 words) introducing the topic of the paper, its scope and approach, should be submitted on line, on the conference website before the 1st of February 2019, after being registered (enter your login or create an account first). Be careful of selecting the panel n°231430 (Karen Sayer):

https://eurhoparis2019.sciencesconf.org/user/submit

 

Regards,

 

Karen Sayer (Leeds Trinity University), Abigail Woods (King’s College London) et Delphine Berdah (Université Paris-Sud / Université Paris Saclay).




The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture:

New perspectives on, and approaches to health,

breeding and production post-1945.

 

4th EURHO Conference, September 10-13, 2019

EHESS, Paris, France.

 

Panel n°231430.

 

 

Organisers: Pr Karen Sayer, Leeds Trinity University, UK.

Pr Abigail Woods, King’s College London, UK.

Dr Delphine Berdah, Université Paris-Sud, France.

 

 

Abstract:

 

This panel will interrogate the roles of science, medicine and technology in modernising livestock production after the Second World War. It will integrate methodological considerations of how to investigate this problem with case studies from different national perspectives, which explore the processes through which production practices were transformed with the aid of new technologies and scientific and veterinary advice. These transformations were highly significant in enabling massive increases in the supply of livestock food at relatively little cost to the consumer. They were also highly controversial on account of the new threats that emerged to human health (such as zoonotic diseases and antimicrobial resistances), livestock welfare, and the environment. Yet surprisingly little is known about them. While historians have described post-WWII developments in agricultural policy, and performed statistical analyses that illustrate the expansion of livestock production and productivity, they have tended to neglect changes taking place at farm level, and how they shaped and were shaped by science, technology and veterinary medicine.

This panel will address this problem by considering the various tools and practices that were mobilized to produce as much food from livestock as possible. These include: innovations in housing, feeding and stockmanship; new reproductive technologies; antimicrobials and other drugs such as hormones and vaccines; health surveillance and biosecurity; animal food science; record keeping and agricultural accounting. Papers will examine the various experts that were involved in developing these innovations and encouraging farmers to adopt them. In animal health, veterinarians played a leading role, but because livestock health was undermined by poor housing and feeding, and vets did not have exclusive control over drugs, they faced competition from many other actors, including state agricultural advisers, and representatives of feed and pharmaceutical companies. Moreover, farmers did not rely wholly on external experts. When changing their production practices they also drew on past experiences, personal assessments of the situation, and insights shared by other farmers - either in person or through the medium of farming magazines. It is therefore important to develop a broad perspective on how the knowledges and practices of modern livestock farming were produced, circulated and evaluated, and how expertise was negotiated.

Several members of the panel will present research findings that address these issues. Others adopt a more methodological perspective that focusses on the use of particular sources and approaches. Directing attention to such materials as the newly-digitised (and previously inaccessible) informational film material held at the Museum of English Rural Life (Reading, UK), specialist farming journals and magazines (that included photographs), advertising materials and advisory articles, grey literature produced by government and the unique value of oral histories, speakers will discuss the challenges and benefits of foregrounding farmers’ perspectives on the past, and how, by working with scholars from other disciplines it is possible not only to enhance historical understandings but also to inform present-day approaches to livestock health and production.






Université Paris-SudDelphine BERDAH
Etudes sur les Sciences et les Techniques
Groupe d'Histoire et de Diffusion des Sciences d'Orsay

Bureau - Bâtiment 407 - Rue du Doyen Georges Poitou
91400 Orsay


Attachment: The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture.pdf
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  • [ATHENA] CFP « The scientisation and medicalisation of livestock agriculture", 4th EURHO Conference, Paris Septembre 2019, Delphine Berdah, 01/18/2019

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