Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T01:19:22.289Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Select Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2018

Amanda Kay McVety
Affiliation:
Miami University
Get access
Type
Chapter
Information
The Rinderpest Campaigns
A Virus, Its Vaccines, and Global Development in the Twentieth Century
, pp. 254 - 277
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Acheson, Dean. Present at the Creation. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1969.Google Scholar
Acheson, Dean. “The Requirements of Reconstruction.” The Department of State Bulletin 16:411 (May 18, 1947): 991994.Google Scholar
Adas, Michael. Dominance by Design: Technological Imperatives and America’s Civilizing Mission. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Adas, Michael. Machines as the Measure of Men: Science, Technology, and Ideologies of Western Dominance. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1990.Google Scholar
Akami, Tomoko. “Beyond Empires’ Science: Inter-Imperial Pacific Science Networks in the 1920s,” in Networking the International System: Global Histories of International Organizations. ed. Herren, Madeleine. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing, 2014, 107132.Google Scholar
Akami, Tomoko. “A Quest to Be Global: The League of Nations Health Organization and Inter-Colonial Regional Governing Agendas of the Far Eastern Association of Tropical Medicine 1910–25.” The International History Review 38:1 (2016): 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Akami, Tomoko. Internationalizing the Pacific: The United States, Japan and the Institute of Pacific Relations in War and Peace, 1919–1945. London: Routledge, 2002.Google Scholar
Alacevich, Michele. “The World Bank and the Politics of Productivity: The Debate on Economic Growth, Poverty, and Living Standards in the 1950s.” Journal of Global History 6:1 (March 2011): 5374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, Arthur. The Fantastic Laboratory of Dr. Weigl. New York: Norton, 2014.Google Scholar
Allen, Charles E.World Health and World Politics.” International Organizations 4:1 (February 1950): 31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amrith, Sunil. Decolonizing International Health: India and Southeast Asia, 1930–1965. London: Palgrave MacMillan, 2006.Google Scholar
Amrith, Sunil and Clavin, Patricia. “Feeding the World: Connecting Europe and Asia, 1930-1945.” Past & Present, 218: Supplement 8 (January 1, 2013): 29-50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amrith, Sunil and Sluga, Glenda. “New Histories of the United Nations.Journal of World History 19:3 (2008): 251274.Google Scholar
Appuhn, Karl. “Ecologies of Beef: Eighteenth-Century Epizootics and the Environmental History of Early Modern Europe.” Environmental History 15:2 (April 2010): 268287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arndt, H. W. Economic Development. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Avery, Donald. Pathogens for War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Avery, Donald H. and Eaton, Mark, ed. The Meaning of Life: The Scientific and Social Experiences of Everitt and Robert Murray, 1930–1964. Toronto: The Champlain Society, 2008.Google Scholar
Baker, James A.VIII. Rinderpest Infection in Rabbits.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 179182.Google Scholar
Baker, James A. and Greig, A. S.. “XII. The Successful Use of Young Chicks to Measure the Concentration of Rinderpest Virus Propagated in Eggs.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 196198.Google Scholar
Ballard, Charles. “The Repercussions of Rinderpest: Cattle Plague and Peasant Decline in Colonial Natal.” The International Journal of African Historical Studies 19:3 (1986): 421450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balmer, Brian. Britain and Biological Warfare. London: Palgrave, 2001.Google Scholar
Banyard, Ashley C., et al. “Global Distribution of Peste des Petits Ruminants Virus and Prospects for Improved Diagnosis and Control.” Journal of General Virology 91 (2010): 28852897.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baranowski, Shelley. Nazi Empire: German Colonialism and Imperialism from Bismarck to Hitler. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Baron, M.D., et al., “The Plowright Vaccine Strain of Rinderpest Virus Has Attenuating Mutations in Most Genes.” Journal of General Virology 86 [2005]: 10931101.Google Scholar
Baron, Michael D.The Institute for Animal Health’s Contribution to the Eradication of Rinderpest.” EMPRES: Transboundary Animal Disease Bulletin, 38 (2011).Google Scholar
Barrett, Thomas, Pastoret, Paul-Pierre, and Taylor, William P., ed. Rinderpest and Peste des Petits Ruminants: Virus Plagues of large and Small Ruminants. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2006.Google Scholar
Barry, Ellen. “7 Indian Women Wage War with Their Village over Jobs.” New York Times (January 30, 2016).Google Scholar
Barry, John M. The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History. New York: Penguin Books, 2004.Google Scholar
Bennett, Brett M. and Hodge, Joseph M., ed. Science and Empire: Knowledge and Networks of Science across the British Empire, 1800–1970. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2011.Google Scholar
Beveridge, W. I. B. Influenza: The Last Great Plague. London: Heinemann, 1977.Google Scholar
Bhattacharya, Sanjoy and Messenger, Sharon, ed. The Global Eradication of Smallpox. New Delhi: Orient BlackSwan, 2010.Google ScholarPubMed
Biggs, David. Quagmire: Nation-Building and Nature in the Mekong Delta. Seattle: University Of Washington Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Binns, H. R. The East African Veterinary Research Organization: Its Development, Objectives and Scientific Activities. Nairobi, Kenya: East African Standard Ltd., 1957.Google Scholar
Black, Megan. “Interior’s Exterior: The State, Mining Companies, and Resource Ideologies in the Point Four Program.” Diplomatic History 40:1 (January 2016): 81110.Google Scholar
Blancou, Jean. History of the Surveillance and Control of Transmissible Animal Diseases. Paris: OIE, 2003.Google Scholar
Bok, Bart J.The United Nations Expanded Program for Technical Assistance.” Science 117:3030 (January 23, 1953): 6770.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Borgwardt, Elizabeth. A New Deal for the World. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Boroway, Iris. Coming to Terms with World Health: The League of Nations Health Organization 1921–1946. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2009.Google Scholar
Boulanger, Paul. “Application of the Complement-Fixation Test to the Demonstration of Rinderpest Virus in the Tissue of Infected Cattle Using Rabbit Antiserum.” Canadian Journal of Comparative Medicine 21:11 (November 1957): 379388.Google Scholar
Boynton, William H.Rinderpest, with Special Reference to Its Control by a New Method of Prophylactic Treatment.” The Philippine Journal of Science 36 (May 1928): 135.Google Scholar
Bozheyeva, Gulvarshyn, Kunakbayev, Yerlan, and Yeleukenov, Dastan. “Former Soviet Biological Weapons Facilities in Kazakhstan: Past, Present, and Future.” Occasional Paper No. 1, Chemical and Biological Weapons Nonproliferation Project, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey Institute of International Studies (June 1999).Google Scholar
Branagan, D. and Hammond, J. A.. “Rinderpest in Tanganyika: A Review.” Bulletin of Epizootic Diseases of Africa 13:3 (September 1965): 225245.Google ScholarPubMed
Brandly, C. A., et al., “Newcastle Disease and Fowl Plague Investigations in the War Research Program.” Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 108:831 (June 1946): 369371.Google ScholarPubMed
Brantz, Dorothee. “‘ Risky Business’: Disease, Disaster and the Unintended Consequences of Epizootics in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century France and Germany.” Environment and History 17 (2011): 3551.Google Scholar
Brewer, Anthony. “Adam Ferguson, Adam Smith, and the Concept of Economic Growth.” History of Political Economy 31:2 (1999): 237254.Google Scholar
Brewer, Anthony. “The Concept of Growth in Eighteenth-Century Economics.” History of Political Economy 27:4 (1995): 609638.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brophy, Leo P., Miles, Wyndham D., and Cochrane, Rexmond C.. The Chemical Warfare Service: From Laboratory to Field. Washington, DC: Center of Military History, United States Army, 1988.Google Scholar
Brotherston, J. G.Lapinised Rinderpest Virus and Vaccine: Some Observations in East Africa.” Journal of Comparative Pathology 61 (1951): 263288.Google Scholar
Brotherston, J. G.Rinderpest: Some Notes on Control by Modified Virus Vaccines, II.” Veterinary Reviews and Annotations 3 (1957): 4556.Google Scholar
Brown, Karen. “Tropical Medicine and Animal Diseases: Onderstepoort and the Development of Veterinary Science in South Africa 1908–1950.Journal of South African Studies 31:3 (September 2005): 513529.Google Scholar
Brown, Karen and Gilfoyle, Daniel, ed. Healing the Herds: Disease, Livestock Economies, and the Globalization of Veterinary Medicine. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Tad. “Await the Jarga: Cattle, Disease, and Livestock Development in Colonial Gambia.” Agricultural History 90:2 (Spring 2016): 230246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, William Adams Jr., and Opie, Redvers. American Foreign Assistance. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 1953.Google Scholar
Buesekom, Monica M. van. Negotiating Development: African Farmers and Colonial Experts at the Office du Niger, 1920–1960. Oxford: James Currey, 2002.Google Scholar
Burnet, F. M.Inapparent Virus Infections: With Special Reference to Australian Examples.” The British Medical Journal 1:3915 (January 18, 1936): 99103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnet, F. M.Influenza Virus on the Developing Egg. IV. The Pathogenicity and Immunizing Power of Egg Virus for Ferrets and Mice.” British Journal of Experimental Pathology 18:1 (1937): 3743.Google Scholar
Burton, W. E. F.The Rinderpest Outbreak in Western Australia in 1923.” Australian Veterinary Journal 56 (April 1980): 200201.Google Scholar
Bynum, W. F.Policing the Heart of Darkness: Aspects of the International Sanitary Conferences.” History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 15:3 (1993): 421434.Google Scholar
Campbell, Bruce M.S.Nature as Historical Protagonist: Environment and Society in Pre-Industrial Britain.” The Economic History Review 63:2 (2010): 281314.Google Scholar
Campbell, Gwyn. “Disease, Cattle, and Slaves: The Development of Trade between Natal and Madagascar, 1875–1904.” African Economic History 19 (1990–1991): 105133.Google Scholar
Carroll, Michael Christopher. Lab 257. New York: William Morrow, 2004.Google Scholar
Catley, Andrew, et al. “Participatory Epidemiology: Approaches, Methods, Experiences.” The Veterinary Journal 191 (2012): 151160.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chibeu, Dickens M., and El-Sawalhy, Ahmed. “Rinderpest Eradication in Africa.” EMPRES: Transboundary Animal Disease Bulletin 38 (2011): 2125.Google Scholar
Clavin, Patricia. Securing the World Economy: The Reinvention of the League of Nations, 1920–1946. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Clavin, Patricia and Wessels, Jens-Wilhelm. “Transnationalism and the League of Nations: Understanding the Work of Its Economic and Financial Organization.” Contemporary European History 14:4 (November 2005): 465492.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cleveland, Harlan. “Economic Aid to China.” Institute of Pacific Relations 18:1 (January 12, 1949): 16.Google Scholar
Coen, Ross. Fu-Go: The Curious History of Japan’s Balloon Bomb Attack on America. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, Ed. “The Paradoxical Politics of Viral Containment; or, How Scale Undoes Us One and All.” Social Text 106 29:1 (Spring 2011): 1535.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collingham, Lizzie. The Taste of War: World War II and the Battle for Food. New York: Penguin, 2013.Google Scholar
Conant, Michael Jr.. “JCRR: An Object Lesson.” Far Eastern Survey 20:9 (May 2, 1951): 89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Constantine, Stephen. The Making of British Colonial Development Policy. London: Frank Cass, 1984.Google Scholar
Cooper, Frederick. “Development, Modernization, and the Social Sciences in the Era of Decolonization: The Examples of British and French Africa.” Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines 10 (2004): 938.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, Frederick. “Reconstructing Empire in British and French Africa.” Past and Present, Supplement 6 (2011): 196210.Google Scholar
Cooper, Frederick and Packard, Randall, ed. International Development and the Social Sciences: Essays on the History and Politics of Knowledge. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Crawford, Dorothy H. Viruses: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Creager, Angela N.H. The Life of a Virus: Tobacco Mosaic Virus as an Experimental Model, 1930–1965. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Cribelli, Teresa. “‘These Industrial Forests’: Economic Nationalism and the Search for Agro-Industrial Commodities in Nineteenth-Century Brazil.” Journal of Latin American Studies 45:3 (August 2013): 545579.Google Scholar
Crowther, J. R.Rinderpest: At War with the Disease of War.” Science Progress 80:1 (1997): 2143.Google ScholarPubMed
Cueto, Marcos. Cold War, Deadly Fevers: Malaria Eradication in Mexico, 1955–1975. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Cullather, Nick. “The Foreign Policy of the Calorie.” American Historical Review 112:2 (April 2007): 336364.Google Scholar
Cullather, Nick. The Hungry World. Cambridge: Harvard, 2010.Google Scholar
Cunningham, Andrew, and Williams, Perry, ed. The Laboratory Revolution in Medicine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Curti, Merle, and Birr, Kendall. Prelude to Point Four: American Technical Missions Overseas, 1838–1938. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1954.Google Scholar
Daubney, R.Récentes Acquisitions dans la Lutte contre la Peste Bovine.” Bulletin – Office International des Épizooties 28 (1947): 3645.Google Scholar
Daubney, R.Rinderpest: A Résumé of Recent Progress in Africa.” The Journal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics 50 (1937): 405409.Google Scholar
Davis, Mike. Late Victorian Holocausts. London: Verso, 2002.Google Scholar
De Bevoise, Ken. Agents of Apocalypse. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
De Kruif, Paul. The Microbe Hunters, Introduction by Gonzalez-Crussi, F.. 1926, San Diego, CA: Harcourt, Inc., 1996.Google Scholar
De Kruif, Paul. We are Amphibians: Julian and Aldous Huxley on the Future of Our Species. Oakland: University of California Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Deichmann, Ute. Biologists under Hitler. Trans. Thomas Dunlap. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1996.Google Scholar
DeWitte, Sharon and Slavin, Philip. “Between Famine and Death: England on the Eve of the Black Death – Evidence from Paleoepidemiology and Manorial Accounts.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 44:1 (Summer 2013): 3760.Google Scholar
Dodd, Norris E.A Summary of Activities of the Food and Agriculture Organization in the Middle East.” Middle East Journal 4:3 (July 1950): 352355.Google Scholar
Dorsey, Kurk. “Bernath Lecture: Dealing with the Dinosaur (and Its Swamp): Putting the Environment in Diplomatic History.” Diplomatic History 29:4 (September 2005): 573587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorsey, Kurkpatrick. Whales and Nations: Environmental Diplomacy on the High Seas. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Dorwart, Reinhold A.Cattle Disease (Rinderpest?): Prevention and Cure in Brandenburg, 1665–1732.” Agricultural History 33:2 (April 1959): 7985.Google Scholar
Easterly, William. The Tyranny of Experts: Economists, Dictators, and the Forgotten Rights of the Poor. New York: Basic Books, 2013.Google Scholar
Edwards, J. T. “The Problem of Rinderpest in India.” Bulletin No. 199, Imperial Institute of Agricultural Research, Pusa (Calcutta Government of India, 1930): 116.Google Scholar
Edwards, J. T.Rinderpest: Some Properties of the Virus and Further Indications for Its Employment in the Serum-Simultaneous Method of Protective Inoculation.” Transactions of the Congress – Far Eastern Association of Tropical Medicine 3 (1927): 699706.Google Scholar
Edwards, J. T.Rinderpest: Active Immunization by Means of the Serum Simultaneous Method; Goat Virus.” Agricultural Journal of India 23 (1928): 185189.Google Scholar
Edwards, J. T.Rinderpest: Some Points on Immunity.” Transactions of the Far-Eastern Association of Tropical Medicine 3 (1927): 707717.Google Scholar
Edwards, J. T.The Uses and Limitations of the Caprinized Virus in the Control of Rinderpest (Cattle Plague) Among British and Near-Eastern Cattle.” The British Veterinary Journal 105:7 (July 1949): 209253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ekbladh, David. The Great American Mission: Modernization and the Construction of an American World Order. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Enders, John F., et al., “Measles Virus: A Summary of Experiments Concerned with Isolation, Properties and Behavior.” American Journal of Public Health 47:3 (March 1957): 275282.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Engerman, David C.Development Politics and the Cold War.” Diplomatic History 41:1 (January 2017): 119.Google Scholar
Engerman, David C. Modernization from the Other Shore: American Intellectuals and the Romance of Russian Development. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Engerman, David C., Gilman, Nils, Haefele, Mark H., and Latham, Michael E.. Staging Growth: Modernization, Development, and the Global Cold War. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Escobar, Arturo. Encountering Development: The Making and Unmaking of the Third World. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.Google Scholar
FAO Office for Corporate Communication. 70 Years of FAO: 1945-2015. Rome: FAO, 2015.Google Scholar
Farley, John. To Cast Out Disease: A History of the International Health Division of the Rockefeller Foundation (1913–1951). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Fenner, F., et al. Smallpox and Its Eradication. Geneva: World Health Organization, 1988.Google Scholar
Fidler, David P.Germs, Governance, and Global Public Health in the Wake of SARS.” Journal of Clinical Investigation 113:6 (March 2004): 799804.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fitzgerald, Deborah. “Exporting American Agriculture: The Rockefeller Foundation in Mexico, 1943–53.” Social Studies of Science 16:3 (August 1986): 457483.Google Scholar
Fitzgerald, J. G.An International Health Organization and the League of Nations.” The Canadian Medical Association Journal 14:6 (June 1924): 532.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. “The Global Rinderpest Eradication Programme: Progress Report on Rinderpest Eradication: Success Stories and Actions Leading to the June 2011Global Declaration” available at http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/resources/documents/AH/GREP_flyer.pdf.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. Declaration of Global Freedom from Rinderpest – Thirty-seventh Session of the FAO Conference, Rome 25 June–2 July 2011, FAO Animal Production and Health Proceedings 17. Rome: FAO, 2013.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. FAO Expert Consultation on the Strategy for Global Rinderpest Eradication. Rome: FAO, 1993.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. Report to the Government of Ethiopia on the Control of Diseases of Livestock, FAO Report No. 497. Rome: FAO (May 1956): 47.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. Report to the Government of Afghanistan on the Control of Animal Diseases, FAO Report No. 204. Rome: FAO (1953):58.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. Report on the International Training Centre on Living Virus Vaccines (Veterinary), FAO Report No. 149. Rome: FAO (August 1953): 1.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. Report to the Government of Pakistan on Control of Animal Diseases, FAO Report No. 103. Rome: FAO (February 1953): 27.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organization. International Organization 7:1 (February 1953): 131.Google Scholar
Foucault, Michel. Security, Territory, Population: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1977–1978, ed. Senellart, Michel, trans. Graham Burchell. New York: Picador, 2007.Google Scholar
Fournié, Guillaume, et al. “Rinderpest Virus Sequestration and Use in Posteradication Era.” Emerging Infectious Diseases 19:1 (January 2013): 151153.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Frey, Marc, Kunkel, Sönke, and Unger, Corrina R., ed. International Organizations and Development, 1945–1990. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedgut, O.A Brief History of Rinderpest in Palestine-Israel.” Israel Journal of Veterinary Medicine 66:3 (September 2011): 6568.Google Scholar
Furuse, Yuki, Suzuki, Akira, and Oshitani, Hitoshi. “Origin of Measles Virus: Divergence from Rinderpest Virus between the 11th and 12th Centuries.” Short Report, Virology Journal 7:52 (2010).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geissler, Erhard, and Courtland Moon, John Ellis van, ed. Biological and Toxin Weapons. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Gilfoyle, Daniel. The Many Plagues of Beasts. Saarbrüken, Germany: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller, 2009.Google Scholar
Gilfoyle, Daniel. “Veterinary Research and the African Rinderpest Epizootic: The Cape Colony, 1896–1898.” Journal of Southern African Studies 29:1 (March 2003): 133154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilman, Nils. Mandarins of the Future: Modernization Theory in Cold War America. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 2003.Google Scholar
Gonzalo, Javier. The Idea of Third World Development: Emerging Perspectives in the United States and Britain, 1900–1950. New York: University Press of America, 1987.Google Scholar
Gorman, Daniel. The Emergence of International Society in the 1920s. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graham, S. E.The (Real)politiks of Culture: U.S. Cultural Diplomacy in Unesco, 1946–1954.” Diplomatic History 30:2 (April 2006): 231251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, David F. “The Ethiopian Farmer.” Western Mail (2 February 1950): 8–9.Google Scholar
Groves, Leslie R. Now It Can Be Told. New York: Harper & Row, 1962.Google Scholar
Gruhn, Isebill V.The Commission for Technical Co-Operation in Africa.” The Journal of Modern African Studies 9:3 (October 1971): 459469.Google Scholar
Guillemin, Jeanne. Biological Weapons. New York: Columbia University Press, 2005.Google ScholarPubMed
Hale, M. W., et al. “XIV. Immunization Experiments with Attenuated Rinderpest Vaccine Including Some Observations on the Keeping Qualities and Potency Tests.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 212221.Google Scholar
Hale, M. W.Rinderpest XIII. The Production of Rinderpest Vaccine from an Attenuated Strain of Virus.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 199211.Google Scholar
Hale, M. W., Walker, R. V. L., Maurer, Fred D., Baker, James A., and Jenkins, Dubois L.. “XIV. Immunization Experiments with Attenuated Rinderpest Vaccine Including Some Observations on the Keeping Qualities and Potency Tests.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 212221.Google Scholar
Hambidge, Gove. The Story of FAO. Toronto: D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., 1955.Google Scholar
Hamblin, Jacob Darwin. Arming Mother Nature: The Birth of Catastrophic Environmentalism. New York: Oxford, 2013.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Keith, et al. “Identifying and Reducing Remaining Stock of Rinderpest Virus.” Emerging Infectious Diseases 21:12 (December 2015): 21172121.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hannah, John A.New Directions in Foreign Aid for the 1970’s.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 52:2 (May 1970): 302307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harder, Andrew. “The Politics of Impartiality: The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in the Soviet Union, 1946–47.” Journal of Contemporary History 47:2 (April 2012): 347369.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hardy, Anne. “Animals, Disease, and Man: Making Connections.” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 46:2 (Spring 2003): 200215.Google Scholar
Harris, Sheldon H. Factories of Death. Revised Edition. New York: Routledge, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrison, Mark. Contagion: How Commerce Has Spread Disease. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Harrison, Mark. “Disease, Diplomacy and International Commerce: The Origins of International Sanitary Regulation in the Nineteenth Century.” Journal of Global History 1:2 (2006): 197217.Google Scholar
Havinden, Michael and Meredith, David, Colonialism and Development: Britain and Its Tropical Colonies, 1850–1960. London: Routledge, 1993.Google Scholar
Headrick, Daniel R. Power over Peoples: Technology, Environments, and Western Imperialism, 1400 to the Present. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Hecht, Gabrielle, ed. Entangled Geographies: Empire and Technopolitics in the Global Cold War. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hell, Stefan. “The Role of European Technology, Expertise and Early Development Aid in the Modernization of Thailand before the Second World War.” Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy 6:2 (2001): 158178.Google Scholar
Helleiner, Eric. Forgotten Foundations of Bretton Woods: International Development and the Making of the Postwar Order. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Henderson, D. A.Principles and Lessons from the Smallpox Eradication Programme.” Bulletin of the World Health Organization 65:4 (1987): 535546.Google Scholar
Henderson, D. A. Smallpox: The Death of a Disease. New York: Prometheus Books, 2009.Google Scholar
Hodge, Joseph Morgan. “On the Historiography of Development (Part 1: The First Wave).” Humanity (Winter 2015): 429460.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodge, Joseph Morgan. Triumph of the Expert: Agrarian Doctrines of Development and the Legacies of British Colonialism. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodge, Joseph Morgan. “Writing the History of Development (Part 2: Longer, Deeper, Wider).” Humanity (Spring 2016): 125174.Google Scholar
Holmes, Edward C. The Evolution and Emergence of RNA Viruses. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homewood, Katherine. Ecology of African Pastoralist Societies. Oxford: James Currey, 2008.Google Scholar
Hopper, Paul F.The Institute of Pacific Relations and Origins of Asian and Pacific Studies.” Pacific Affairs 61:1 (Spring 1988): 98121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howard-Jones, Norman. “Origins of International Health Work.” British Medical Journal 1 (May 6, 1950): 10321046.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huber, Valeska. “The Unification of the Globe by Disease? The International Sanitary Conferences on Cholera, 1851–1894.” The Historical Journal 49:2 (June 2006): 453476.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hudson, J. R.Rinderpest Virus Attenuated in Eggs.” The Veterinary Record 59:25 (5 July 1947): 331.Google ScholarPubMed
Hunt, Linda. “U.S. Coverup of Nazi Scientists.” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 2:8 (April 1985): 1624.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, James A.The Rinderpest Epidemic of 1949–50 Taiwan (Formosa).” Chinese-American Joint Commission on Rural Reconstruction, Animal Industries Series, No. 1. Taipei: February 1951.Google Scholar
Hutcheon, Duncan. “Rinderpest in South Africa.Journal of Comparative Pathology and Therapeutics 15:4 (December 31, 1902): 300324.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huygelen, C.The Immunization of Cattle against Rinderpest in Eighteenth-Century Europe.” Medical History 41 (1997): 182196.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huxley, Julian, ed. Reshaping Man’s Heritage. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd, 1947.Google Scholar
Huxley, Julian. UNESCO: Its Purpose and Its Philosophy. 1947, London: Euston Grove Press, 2010.Google Scholar
Huxley, J., et al. When Hostilities Cease: Papers on Relief and Reconstruction Prepared for the Fabian Society. London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1944.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, Daniel. “Modernization and Development in U.S. Foreign Relations,” Passport (September 2012): 25.Google Scholar
Immerwahr, Daniel. Thinking Small: The United States and the Lure of Community Development. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Conference on Epizootic Diseases in Domestic Animals.” Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 60, NS13:1 (October 1921): 124138.Google Scholar
Iriye, Akira. Cultural Internationalism and World Order. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriye, Akira. Global Community. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriye, Akira. “The Making of a Transnational World,” in Global Interdependence: The World after 1945. ed. Iriye, Akira. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2014, 681847.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, Julia F.The Great White Train: Typhus, Sanitation, and U.S. International Development during the Russian Civil War.” Endeavor 36:3 (2012): 8996.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Irwin, Julia F. Making the World Safe: The American Red Cross and a Nation’s Humanitarian Awakening. New York: Oxford University Press, 2013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin, Julia F.Taming Total War: Great War-Era American Humanitarianism and Its Legacies.” Diplomatic History 38:4 (2014): 763775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isogai, S.On the Rabbit Virus Inoculation as an Active Immunization Method against Rinderpest for Mongolian Cattle.” The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Science 6:5 (1944) 371390.Google Scholar
Iyer, Samantha. “Colonial Population and the Idea of Development.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 55:1 (2013): 6591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jachertz, Ruth. “Coping with Hunger? Visions of a Global Food System, 1930–1960.” Journal of Global Health 6 (2011): 99119.Google Scholar
Jacotot, H.Sur la Sensibilité du Lapin au Virus de la Peste Bovine.” Bulletin de la Société de Pathologie Exotique 23 (November 12, 1930): 904909.Google Scholar
Javaloyes, Pedro, et al. 70 Years of FAO: 1945–2015. FAO Office for Corporate Communication. 2015, http://www.fao.org/3/a-i5142e.pdf.Google Scholar
Jenkins, Dubois, and Shope, Richard E.. “VII. The Attenuation of Rinderpest Virus for Cattle by Cultivation in Embryonating Eggs.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 174178.Google Scholar
Jolly, Richard, Emmerij, Louis, Ghai, Dharam, and Lapeyre, Frédéric. UN Contributions to Development Thinking and Practice. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Jones, Bryony A., et al. “The Economic Impact of Eradicating Peste des Petits Ruminants: A Benefit-Cost Analysis.” PLOS ONE (February 22, 2016) available at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0149982.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, Joseph M. The United Nations at Work: Developing Land, Forests, Oceans … and People. Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1965.Google Scholar
Kakizaki, Chiharu, Nakanishi, Shunzo, and Nakamur, Junji. “Experimental Studies on the Economical Rinderpest Vaccine.” Journal of the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science 6:2 (1927): 107120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kakizaki, Chiharu, Nakanishi, Shunzo, and Oizumi, Takashi. “Experimental Studies on Prophylactic Inoculation against Rinderpest, Report III.” Journal of the Japanese Society of Veterinary Science 5:4 (1926): 221280.Google Scholar
Kakizaki, Chiharu. “Study on the Glycerinated Rinderpest Vaccine.” Kitasato Archives of Experimental Medicine 2 (1918): 5966.Google Scholar
Kelser, R. A., Youngberg, S., and Topacio, T.. “An Improved Vaccine for Immunization against Rinderpest.” Journal of the American Veterinary Medicine Association 74 (1929): 2841.Google Scholar
Kent, John. The Internationalization of Colonialism. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992.Google Scholar
Kesteven, K. L, ed. Rinderpest Vaccines: Their Production and Use in the Field, 1st Ed. Washington, DC: FAO, 1949.Google Scholar
Kishi, Hiroshi. “A Historical Study on Outbreaks of Rinderpest during the Yedo Era in Japan.” The Yamaguchi Journal of Veterinary Medicine 3 (1976): 3340.Google Scholar
Kjekshus, Helge. Ecology Control and Economic Development in East African History. 1977, London: James Currey, 1996 impression.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knab, Cornelia. “Infectious Rats and Dangerous Cows: Transnational Perspectives on Animal Disease in the First Half of the Twentieth Century.” Contemporary European History 20:3 (August 2011): 281306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knab, Cornelia and Forclaz, Amalia Ribi. “Transnational Co-Operation in Food, Agriculture, Environment and Health in Historical Perspective: Introduction.” Contemporary European History 20:3 (August 2011): 247255.Google Scholar
Knight, R. F. and Thomson, C. G.. “Brief Report on the Veterinary Institutes of Japan.” Philippine Agricultural Review 4 (March 1911): 111118.Google Scholar
Knopf, Lea, Miyagishima, Kazuaki, and Vallat, Bernard. “OIE’s Contribution to the Eradication of Rinderpest,” in EMPRES: Transboundary Animal Diseases Bulletin 38 (2011): 1820.Google Scholar
Koch, Robert. “Prof. Robert Koch’s Berichte über seine in Kimberley ausgeführten Experimentalstudien zur Bekämpfung der Rinderpest.” Special reprint of Deutschen Medicinischen Wochenschrift numbers 15 and 16 (1897): 115.Google Scholar
Koch, Robert. “Special Report to the ‘British Medical Journal’ by Professor R. Koch on His Research into the Cause of Cattle Plague.” The British Medical Journal 1:1898 (May 15, 1897): 12451246.Google Scholar
Kott, Sandrine. “International Organizations – A Field of Research for a Global History.Zeithistorische Forschungen 8 (2011): 446450.Google Scholar
Krementsov, Nikolai. The Cure. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Kruszweski, Charles. “International Affairs: Germany’s Lebensraum.” The American Political Science Review 34:5 (October 1940): 964975.Google Scholar
Latham, Michael E. Modernization as Ideology: American Social Science and “Nation Building” in the Kennedy Era. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Latham, Michael E. The Right Kind of Revolution: Modernization, Development, and U.S. Foreign Policy from the Cold War to the Present. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Latour, Bruno. The Pasteurization of France, trans. Alan Sheridan and John Law. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1988.Google Scholar
League of Nations. Report of the Delegation on Economic Depressions, Part I, The Transition from War to Peace Economy. Geneva: League of Nations, 1943.Google Scholar
Leffler, Melvyn P. A Preponderance of Power. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leffler, Melvyn P. For the Soul of Mankind. New York: Hill and Wang, 2007.Google Scholar
Leffler, Melvyn P. and Painter, David S., ed. Origins of the Cold War. 2nd Ed. New York: Routledge, 2005.Google Scholar
Leitenberg, Milton and Zilinskas, Raymond A. with Kuhn, Jens H.. The Soviet Biological Weapons Program. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Lepissier, H.E. OAU/STRC Joint Campaign against Rinderpest in Central and West Africa (1961–1969). Lagos: OAU/STRC, 1971.Google Scholar
Lewis, Joanna. Empire State-Building: War & Welfare in Kenya, 1925–52. Oxford: James Currey, 2000.Google Scholar
Lie, Trygve. In the Cause of Peace: Seven Years with the United Nations. New York, 1954.Google Scholar
Lindenmann, Jean. “Typhus Vaccine Developments from the First to the Second World War (On Paul Weindling’s ‘Between Bacteriology and Virology …’).” History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 24:3/4 (2002): 467485.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Livingston, Julie and Puar, Jasbir K.. “Interspecies.” Social Text 106 29:1 (Spring 2011): 314.Google Scholar
Loth, Wilfried. “States and the Changing Equations of Power,” in Global Interdependence. ed. Iriye, Akira. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014, 11199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowe, Keith. Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II. New York: Picador, 2012.Google Scholar
Lurtz, Casey Marina. “Developing the Mexican Countryside: The Department of Fomento’s Social Project of Modernization.” Business History Review 90:3 (Autumn 2016): 431455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macekura, Stephen J. Of Limits and Growth: The Rise of Global Sustainable Development. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macekura, Stephen J.. “The Point Four Program and U.S. International Development Policy.” Political Science Quarterly 128:1 (Spring 2013): 127160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacFarlane, David. LThe UNRRA Experience in Relation to Developments in Food and Agriculture.” Journal of Farm Economics 30:1 (February 1948): 6977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mack, Roy. “The Great African Cattle Plague Epidemic of the 1890’s.” Tropical Animal Health and Production 2:4 (December 1970): 210219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacOwen, K. D. S. “Virulent Rinderpest Virus (R.B.K.).” Annual Report Veterinary Service Department Kenya (1955), 29.Google Scholar
Madsen, Thorvald. “The Scientific Work of the Health Organization of the League of Nations.” Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 13:8 (August 1937): 439465.Google Scholar
Manela, Erez. “A Pox on Your Narrative: Writing Disease Control into Cold War History.” Diplomatic History 34:2 (April 2010): 299323.Google Scholar
Manela, Erez. “Globalizing the Great Society,” in Beyond the Cold War: Lyndon Johnson and the New Global Challenges of the 1960s, ed. Gavin, Francis J. and Lawrence, Mark Atwood. New York: Oxford University Press, 2014, 165181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manela, Erez. The Wilsonian Moment: Self-Determination and the International Origins of Anticolonial Nationalism. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marcus, Harold. A History of Ethiopia, updated ed. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Marcus, Harold G. The Life and Times of Menelik II. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975.Google Scholar
Mariner, Jeffrey C., with additions by Paskin, Roger. FAO Animal Health Manual 10 – Manual on Participatory Epidemiology – Method for the Collection of Action-Oriented Epidemiological Intelligence. FAO, 2000.Google Scholar
Mariner, Jeffrey C., et al. “Comparison of Effect of Various Chemical Stabilizers and Lyophilization Cycles on the Theromostability of a Vero Cell-Adapted Rinderpest Vaccine.” Veterinary Microbiology 21:3 (January 1990): 195209.Google Scholar
Mariner, Jeffrey C.. “The Opportunity to Eradicate Peste des Petits Ruminants.” The Journal of Immunology 196 (2016): 34993506.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mariner, Jeffrey C.. “Rinderpest Eradication: Appropriate Technology and Social Innovations.” Science 337:6100 (September 14, 2012): 13091312.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mariner, J.C., and Roeder, P.L.. “Use of Participatory Epidemiology in Studies of the Persistence of Lineage 2 Rinderpest Virus in East Africa.” The Veterinary Record 152 (2003): 641647.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mariner, Jeffrey, Roeder, Peter, and Admassu, Berhanu. “Community Participation and the Global Eradication of Rinderpest,” in PLA Notes 45: Community Based Animal Health Care. ed. Andy Catley and Tim Leyland (October 2002): 2933. http://pubs.iied.org/pdfs/G02019.pdf.Google Scholar
Mariner, Jeffrey, Roeder, Peter, and Admassu, Berhanu. Materials on the Trial of Former Servicemen of the Japanese Army Charged with Manufacturing and Employing Bacteriological Weapons. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1950.Google Scholar
Mathur, Satish Chandra. “The West Asian Rinderpest Eradication Campaign.” EMPRESS: Freedom from Rinderpest, Bulletin 38 (2011): 2631.Google Scholar
Maul, Daniel. “‘Help Them Move the ILO Way’: The International Labor Organization and the Modernization Discourse in the Era of Decolonization and the Cold War.” Diplomatic History 33:3 (June 2009): 387404.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maurer, Fred D., Walker, R.V.L., Shope, Richard E., Griffiths, Henry J., and Jenkins, Dubois L.. “V. Attempts to Prepare an Effective Rinderpest Vaccine from Inactivated Egg-Cultured Virus.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 164169.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark. Hitler’s Empire: How the Nazis Ruled Europe. New York: Penguin, 2009.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark. Governing the World: The History of an Idea. New York: Penguin Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark. No Enchanted Palace: The End of Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations. Princeton: Oxford University Press, 2009.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark. “Reconstruction: The Historiographical Issues.” Past and Present, Supplement 6 (2011): 1728.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKercher, P.D.Rinderpest Virus Adapted to the Chorioallantoic Membrane of the Chick Embryo – Its Attenuation and Use as a Vaccine.” Canadian Journal of Comparative Medicine 21:11 (November 1957): 374378.Google Scholar
McNeill, J. R. Mosquito Empires. Cambridge: Cambridge, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNeill, J. R. and Unger, Corinna R., ed. Environmental Histories of the Cold War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
McVety, Amanda. Enlightened Aid: U.S. Development as Foreign Policy in Ethiopia. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McVety, Amanda. “Pursuing Progress: Point Four in Ethiopia.” Diplomatic History 32:3 (June 2008): 371403.Google Scholar
Mehos, Donna C. and Moon, Suzanne M.. “The Uses of Potability: Circulating Experts in the Technopolitics of Cold War and Decolonization,” in Entangled Geographies. ed. Hecht, Gabrielle. Cambridge: MIT Press, 2011, 4374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mercado, Stephen C.The Japanese Army’s Noborito Institute.” International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 17 (2004): 286299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miescher, Giorgio. Namibia’s Red Line: The History of a Veterinary and Settlement Border. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.Google Scholar
Milobsky, David, and Galambos, Louis. “The McNamara Bank and Its Legacy, 1968–1987.” Business and Economic History 24:2 (Winter 1995): 167195.Google Scholar
Ministère de L’Agriculture, Républic Francaise. Conférence Internationale pour L’Étude des Épizooties, Paris, May 25–28, 1921. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1921.Google Scholar
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development Animal and Plant Health Regulatory Directorate. Ethiopia Freed from the Most Dangerous Cattle Disease. Addis Ababa, June 2009.Google Scholar
Mishra, Saurabh. Beastly Encounters of the Raj. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Mishra, Saurabh. “Beasts, Murrains, and the British Raj: Reassessing Colonial Medicine in India from the Veterinary Perspective, 1860–1900.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 85 (2011): 587619.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Timothy. “Economentality: How the Future Entered Government.” Critical Inquiry 40 (Summer 2014): 479507.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Timothy. Rule of Experts: Egypt, Techno-Politics, Modernity. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitter, Rana. Forgotten Ally. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013.Google Scholar
Mitter, Rana. “Imperialism, Transnationalism, and the Reconstruction of Post-War China: UNRRA in China, 1944–7.” Past and Present, Supplement 8 (2013): 5169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitter, Rana, and Schneider, Helen M.. “Introduction: Relief and Reconstruction in Wartime China.” European Journal of East Asian Studies 11 (2012): 179186.Google Scholar
Moon, Suzanne. “Empirical Knowledge, Scientific Authority, and Native Development: The Controversy over Sugar/Rice Ecology in the Netherlands East Indies, 1905–1914.” Environment and History 10:1 (2004): 5981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morens, David M., et al. “Global Rinderpest Eradication: Lessons Learned and Why Humans Should Celebrate Too.” The Journal of Infectious Diseases 204:4 (August 15, 2011): 502505.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nagata, Naomi. “International Control of Epidemic Diseases from a Historical and Cultural Perspective,” in Networking the International System, ed. Herren, M.. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing, 2014, 7388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, Junji and Kuroda, Sadao. “Rinderpest: On the Virulence of the Attenuated Rabbit Virus for Cattle.” The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Science 4:2 (1942): 75102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakamura, Junji, Wagatuma, Shosaburo, and Fukusho, Kanemato. “On the Experimental Infection with Rinderpest Virus in the Rabbits.” The Japanese Journal of Veterinary Science 17 (1938): 185204.Google Scholar
Nakamura, Junji and Miyamoto, Takeshi. “Avianization of Lapinized Rinderpest Virus.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 14 (1953): 307317.Google Scholar
Nash, Linda. Inescapable Ecologies: A History of Environment, Disease, and Knowledge. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Neill, Deborah J. Networks in Tropical Medicine: Internationalism, Colonialism, and the Rise of a Medical Specialty, 1890–1930. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Newfield, Timothy P.A Cattle Panzootic in Early Fourteenth-Century Europe.” Agricultural History Review 57 (2009): 155190.Google Scholar
Newfield, Timothy P.. “A Great Carolingian Panzootic: The Probable Extent, Diagnosis and Impact of an Early Ninth-Century Cattle Pestilence.Argos 46 (2012): 200210.Google Scholar
Newfield, Timothy P.Early Medieval Epizootics and Landscapes of Disease: The Origins and Triggers of European Livestock Pestilences, 400–1000 CE,” in Landscapes and Societies in Medieval Europe East of the Elbe, ed. Kleingärtner, Sunhild, Rossignol, Sébastian and Wehner, Donat, Papers in Mediaeval Studies 23. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2013: 73113.Google Scholar
Newfield, Timothy P.. “Human-Bovine Plagues in Early Middle Ages.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 45:1 (Summer 2015): 138.Google Scholar
Nicolle, M. and Mustafa, Adil. “Etudes sur la Peste Bovine. Troisième Mémoire. Expériences sur la Filtration du Virus.” Annales de l’Institut Pasteur 16 (1902): 5664.Google Scholar
Njeumi, F., et al. “The Long Journey: A Brief Review of the Eradication of Rinderpest.” Revue Scientifique et Technique (International Office of Epizootics) 31:3 (2012): 729746.Google Scholar
Normile, Dennis. “Driven to Extinction.” Science 319:5870 (21 March 2008): 16081609.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nunan, Timothy. Humanitarian Invasion: Global Development in Cold War Afghanistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
OFRRO Division of Public Information. The Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations, Department of State. Washington, DC, 1943.Google Scholar
O’Gallagher, Marianna. Grosse Ile: Gateway to Canada, 1832–1937. Quebec City: Livres Carraig Books, 1984.Google Scholar
Olitsky, Peter K.Hans Zinsser and His Studies of Typhus Fever.” The Journal of the American Medical Association 115:10 (March 8, 1941): 907912.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L.The First Line of Defense: Inventing the Infrastructure to Combat Animal Diseases.” The Journal of Economic History 69:2 (June 2009): 327357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Olmstead, Alan L. and Rhode, Paul W.Arresting Contagion: Science, Policy, and Conflicts over Animal Disease Control.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Onselen, C. van. “Reactions to Rinderpest in Southern Africa 1896–97.” The Journal of African History 13:3 (1972): 473488.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orr, John Boyd. The White Man’s Dilemma. 1953, New York: British Book Centre, Inc., 1954.Google Scholar
Oshinsky, David M. Polio: An American Story. New York: Oxford, 2006.Google Scholar
Osterhammel, Jürgen. “‘Technical Co-Operation’ between the League of Nations and China.” Modern Asian Studies 13:4 (1979): 661680.Google Scholar
Owen, David. “The United Nations Expanded Program of Technical Assistance – A Multilateral Approach.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 323 (May 1959): 2532.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Özkul, Türel, and Gül, R. Tamay Başagac. “The Collaboration of Maurice Nicolle et Adil Mustafa: The Discovery of Rinderpest Agent.” Revue de Médicine Vétérinaire 159 (2008): 243246.Google Scholar
Packard, Randall M. A History of Global Health: Interventions in the Lives of Other Peoples. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Packard, Randall M.. “Malaria Dreams: Postwar Visions of Health and Development in the Third World.” Medical Anthropology 17:3 (May 1997): 279296.Google Scholar
Packard, Randall M.. “‘Roll Back Malaria, Roll in Development’: Reassessing the Economic Burden of Malaria.” Population and Development Review 35:1 (March 2009): 5387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Packenham, Robert A. Liberal America and the Third World: Political Development Ideas in Foreign Aid. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1973.Google Scholar
Pankhurst, Richard. Economic History of Ethiopia, 1800–1935. Addis Ababa: Haile Sellassie I University Press, 1968.Google Scholar
Pankhurst, Richard. “The Great Ethiopian Famine of 1888–1892: A New Assessment.” The Journal of the History of Medicine and Applied Science (April 1966): 95124.Google Scholar
Parmar, Inderjeet. Foundations in the American Century: The Ford, Carnegie, and Rockefeller Foundations in the Rise of American Power. New York: Columbia University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Patenaude, Bertrand M. The Big Show in Bololand: The American Relief Expedition to Soviet Russia in the Famine of 1921. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2002.Google Scholar
Patterson, K. David. “Typhus and Its Control in Russia, 1870–1940.” Medical History 37 (1993): 361381.Google Scholar
Pedersen, Susan. “Back to the League of Nations.” The American Historical Review 112:4 (October 2007): 10911117.Google Scholar
Pedersen, Susan. The Guardians: The League of Nations and the Crisis of Empire. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Pemberton, JoAnne. “New Worlds for Old: The League of Nations in the Age of Electricity.” Review of International Studies 28 (2002) 311336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perren, Richard. “Filth and Profit, Disease and Health: Public and Private Impediments to Slaughterhouse Reform in Victorian Britain,” in Meat, Modernity, and the Rise of the Slaughter House. ed. Lee, Paula Young. Durham, NH: University of New Hampshire Press, 2008, 127150.Google Scholar
Phillips, Ralph W.International Cooperation to Improve World Agriculture.” The Scientific Monthly 79:3 (September 1954): 154164.Google Scholar
Phoofolo, Pule. “Epidemics and Revolutions: The Rinderpest Epidemic in Late Nineteenth-Century Southern Africa.” Past & Present 138 (February 1993): 112143.Google Scholar
Phoofolo, Pule. “Face to Face with Famine: the BaSotho and the Rinderpest, 1897–1899.” Journal of Southern African Studies 29:2 (June 2003): 503527.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Plemper, Richard K., and Hammond, Anthea L.. “Will Synergizing Vaccination with Therapeutics Boost Measles Virus Eradication?Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery 9:2 (February 2014): 201214.Google Scholar
Plowright, W.The Application of Monolayer Tissue Culture Techniques in Rinderpest Research. II. The Use of Attenuated Culture Virus as a Vaccine for Cattle.” Bulletin de l’OIE 57 (1962c): 253276.Google Scholar
Plowright, W., Rampton, C. S., Taylor, W. P., and Herniman, K. A. J., “Studies on Rinderpest Culture Vaccine, III. Stability of the Lyophilised Product.” Research in Veterinary Science 11:1 (1970): 71–8.Google Scholar
Plowright, W. and Ferris, R.D.. “Cytopathogenicity of Rinderpest Virus in Tissue Culture.” Nature 179 (February 9, 1957): 316.Google Scholar
Plowright, W. and Ferris, R.D..“Studies with Rinderpest Virus in Tissue Culture, I. Growth and Cytopathogenicity.” Journal of Comparative Pathology 69 (1959): 152172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Plowright, W. and Ferris, R.D..“Studies with Rinderpest Virus in Tissue Culture, II. Pathogenicity for Cattle of Culture-Passaged Virus.” Journal of Comparative Pathology 69 (1959): 173184.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Plowright, W. and Ferris, R.D..“Studies with Rinderpest Virus in Tissue Culture: The Use of Attenuated Culture Virus as a Vaccine for Cattle.” Revue Scientifique et Technique (International Office of Epizootics) 3 (1962): 172182.Google Scholar
Pomeroy, Laura W., Bjørnstad, Ottar N., and Holmes, Edward C.. “The Evolutionary and Epidemiological Dynamics of the Paramyxoviridae.” Journal of Molecular Evolution 66 (2008): 98106.Google Scholar
Pottevin, TH.Madsen, and White, R. Norman. “Typhus and Cholera in Poland: The Action of the League of Nations.” The Lancet (December 4, 1920): 11591160.Google Scholar
Powell, John W.A Hidden Chapter in History.” The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 37:8 (October 1981): 4452.Google Scholar
Preston, Andrew. “Monsters Everywhere: A Genealogy of National Security.” Diplomatic History 38:3 (June 2014): 492499.Google Scholar
Reader, John. Africa: The Biography of a Continent. New York: Vintage, 1997.Google Scholar
Reinhardt, Bob H. The End of a Global Pox: America and the Eradication of Smallpox in the Cold War Era. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Reinhardt, Bob H.. “The Global Great Society and the US Commitment to Smallpox Eradication.Endeavour 34:4 (December 2010): 164172.Google Scholar
Reinisch, Jessica. “‘Auntie UNRRA’ at the Crossroads.” Past and Present, Supplement 8 (2013): 7097.Google Scholar
Reinisch, Jessica. “Internationalism in Relief: The Birth (and Death) of UNRRA.” Past and Present, Supplement 6 (2011): 258289.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reinisch, Jessica. “‘We Shall Rebuild Anew a Powerful Nation’: UNRRA, Internationalism and National Reconstruction in Poland.” Journal of Contemporary History 43:3 (July 2008): 451476.Google Scholar
Reisinger, Robert C., et al. “Use of Rabbit-Passaged Strains of the Nakamura LA Rinderpest Virus for Immunizing Korean Cattle.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 15:57 (October 1954): 554560.Google ScholarPubMed
Renaud, Anne. Island of Hope and Sorrow: The Story of Grosse Île. Montreal: Lobster Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Rich, Karl M., Roland-Holst, David, and Otte, Joachim. “An Assessment of the Socio-Economic Impacts of Global Rinderpest Eradication.” FAO Animal Production and Health Working Paper, Rome, 2012. http://www.fao.org/docrep/015/i2584e/i2584e00.htm.Google Scholar
Rimmington, Anthony. “The Soviet Union’s Offensive Program: The Implications for Contemporary Arms Control,” in Biological Warfare and Disarmament: New Problems/New Perspectives. ed. Wright, Susan. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002: 103148.Google Scholar
Roeder, Peter. “Making a Global Impact: Challenges for the Future.” Veterinary Record 169 (2011): 671674.Google Scholar
Roeder, Peter, Mariner, Jeffrey, and Kock, Richard. “Rinderpest: The Veterinary Perspective on Eradication.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 368:1623 (August 5, 2013). doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.1098%2Frstb.2012.0139.Google ScholarPubMed
Roeder, Peter and Rich, Karl. “The Global Effort to Eradicate Rinderpest.” International Food Policy Research Institute Discussion Paper 00923 (November 2009) available at http://ebrary.ifpri.org/utils/getfile/collection/p15738coll2/id/29876/filename/29877.pdf.Google Scholar
Rogers, Leonard. “Prophylactic Inoculations against Animal Diseases in the British Empire.” The British Medical Journal 1:4080 (March 18, 1939): 565566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Romano, Terrie M.The Cattle Plague of 1865 and the Reception of ‘The Germ Theory’ in Mid-Victorian Britain.” Journal of the History of Medicine 52 (January 1997): 5180.Google Scholar
Rosebury, Theodor and Kabat, Elvin A., with the Assistance of Boldt, Martin H.. “Bacterial Warfare.” The Journal of Immunology 56 (1947): 796.Google Scholar
Rosen, S. McKee. The Combined Boards of the Second World War. New York: Columbia University Press, 1951.Google Scholar
Rosenberg, Emily S. Spreading the American Dream: American Economic and Cultural Expansion, 1890–1945. New York: Hill and Wang, 1982.Google Scholar
Rusk, Dean. “The Bases of United States Foreign Policy.” Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science 27:2 (January 1962): 98110.Google Scholar
Russell, Edmund. War and Nature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Russell, Paul F.International Preventive Medicine.” The Scientific Monthly 71:6 (December 1950): 393400.Google Scholar
Sasaki, Masao, et al. “Global Rinderpest Eradication and the South Asia Rinderpest Eradication Campaign.” EMPRES: Transboundary Animal Disease Bulletin 38 (2011): 3240.Google Scholar
Sasamoto, Yukuo. “The Scientific Intelligence Survey: The Compton Survey,” in A Social History of Science and Technology in Contemporary Japan. Vol. I, Ed. Nakayama, Shigeru. Melbourne: Trans Pacific Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Saunders, P. T. and Kylasam Ayyar, Rao Sahib K.. “An Experimental Study of Rinderpest Virus in Goats in a Series of 150 Direct Passages.” The Indian Journal of Veterinary Science and Animal Husbandry 6 (1936): 186.Google Scholar
Schmelzer, Matthias. The Hegemony of Growth: The OECD and the Making of the Economic Growth Paradigm. Cambridge: Cambridge, 2016.Google Scholar
Schein, H.Expériences sur la Peste Bovine.” Bulletin de la Societe de Pathologie Exotique et de ses Filiales 19 (December 8, 1926): 915928.Google Scholar
Scott, Gordon R.Adverse Reactions in Cattle after Vaccination with Lapinized Rinderpest Virus,” Journal of Hygiene 61 (1963): 193203.Google Scholar
Scott, Gordon R.Rinderpest,” in Advances in Veterinary Science, V. 9, ed. Bradley, C. A. and Jungherr, E. L.. New York: Academic Press, 1964, 113224.Google Scholar
Scott, Gordon R.Rinderpest Virus” in Virus Infections of Ruminants, ed. Dinter, Z. and Morein, B.. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1990, 341354.Google Scholar
Sealey, Anne. “Globalizing the 1926 International Sanitary Convention.” Journal of Global History 6 (2011): 431455.Google Scholar
Sharp, Walter R.The Institutional Framework for Technical Assistance.” International Organization 7:3 (August 1953): 342379.Google Scholar
Shen, Tsung-han. The Sino-American Joint Commission on Rural Reconstruction. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1970.Google Scholar
Shephard, Ben. “‘Becoming Planning Minded’: The Theory and Practice of Relief 1940–1945.” Journal of Contemporary History 43:3 (July 2008): 405419.Google Scholar
Shishido, A., Yamanouchi, K., Hikita, M., Sako, T., Fukuda, A., and Kobune, F.. “Development of a Cell Culture System Susceptible to Measles, Canine Distemper, and Rinderpest Viruses.” Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung 22:3–4 (1967): 364380.Google Scholar
Shope, Richard E.Experimental Wartime Studies on Rinderpest.” Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 110 (April 1947): 216218.Google Scholar
Shope, Richard E.. “Influenza: History, Epidemiology, and Speculation.” Public Health Reports 73:2 (February 1958): 165178.Google Scholar
Shope, Richard E., Griffiths, Henry J., and Jenkins, Dubois L.. “I: The Cultivation of Rinderpest Virus in the Developing Hen’s Egg.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 7:23 (April 1946): 135141.Google Scholar
Shope, Richard E., Maurer, Fred D., Jenkins, Dubois L., Griffiths, Henry J., and Baker, James A.. “IV: Infection of the Embryos and the Fluids of Developing Hens’ Eggs.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 152163.Google Scholar
Simpson, Bradley R. Economists with Guns: Authoritarian Development and U.S.–Indonesian Relations, 1960–1968. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skinner, Robert P. Abyssinia of Today. New York: Longmans, Green & Co., 1906.Google Scholar
Skloot, Rebecca. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. New York: Broadway Books, 2010.Google Scholar
Slavin, Philip. “The Great Bovine Pestilence and Its Economic and Environmental Consequences in England and Wales, 1318–50.” The Economic History Review 65:4 (2012): 12391266.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda. Internationalism in the Age of Nationalism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda. “Turning International: Foundations of Modern International Thought and New Paradigms for Intellectual History.History of European Ideas 41:1 (2015): 103115.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda. “UNESCO and the (One) World of Julian Huxley.” Journal of World History 21:3 (September 2010): 393418.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda and Clavin, Patricia, ed. Internationalisms: A Twentieth-Century History. Cambridge: Cambridge, 2017.Google Scholar
Smith, Major-General Sir Frederick. The Early History of Veterinary Literature and Its British Development, Vol. II. London: Ballière, Tindall and Cox, 1924.Google Scholar
Hailemariam, Solomon. The Diary of an African Veterinary Doctor. Bloomington, IN: Xlibris, 2010.Google Scholar
Hailemariam, Soloman, Besin, Rene, and Kariuki, Datsun. Wiping the Tears of African Cattle Owners. Bloomington, IN: Xlibris, 2010.Google Scholar
Sonoda, Akiro. “Production of Rinderpest Tissue Culture Live Vaccine.” Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly 17:3 (1983): 191198.Google Scholar
Speich, Daniel. “The Use of Global Abstractions: National Income Accounting in the Period of Imperial Decline.” Journal of Global History 6:1 (March 2011): 728.Google Scholar
Spinage, C. A. Cattle Plague: A History. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2003.Google Scholar
Stafford, Jane. “Vaccine Can Increase Food.” The Science News-Letter 49:11 (March 16, 1946): 174175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staley, Eugene. “Relief and Rehabilitation in China.” Far Eastern Survey 13:20 (October 4, 1944): 183185.Google Scholar
Staley, Eugene. World Economy in Transition. Reissue. Port Washington, NY: Kennikat Press, 1971.Google Scholar
Staples, Amy L. S. The Birth of Development: How the World Bank, Food and Agriculture Organization, and World Health Organization Changed the World, 1945–1965. Kent: Kent State Press, 2006.Google Scholar
Steed, Wickham. “Ariel Warfare: Secret German Plans.” The Nineteenth Century and After 116 (July 1934): 114.Google Scholar
Steed, Wickham. “The Future of Warfare.” The Nineteenth Century and After 116 (August 1934): 129140.Google Scholar
Stepan, Nancy Leys. Eradication: Ridding the World of Diseases Forever? Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Stirling, R. F.Some Experiments in Rinderpest Vaccination: Active Immunisation of Indian Plains Cattle by Inoculation with Goat-Adapted Virus Alone in Field Conditions.” The Veterinary Journal 88 (1932): 192204.Google Scholar
Sun, Yat-sen. The International Development of China. 2nd Ed. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1929.Google Scholar
Sunseri, Thaddeus. “The Entangled History of Sadoka (Rinderpest) and Veterinary Science in Tanzania and the Wider World, 1891–1901.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 89 (2015): 92121.Google Scholar
Talbot, Ross B.The International Fund for Agricultural Development.” Political Science Quarterly 95:2 (Summer 1980): 261276.Google Scholar
Taylor, William P.Epidemiology and Control of Rinderpest.Revue Scientifique et Technique (International Office of Epizootics) 5:2 (1986): 407410.Google Scholar
Taylor, William P., Bhat, P. N., and Nanda, Y. P.. “The Principles and Practice of Rinderpest Eradication.” Veterinary Microbiology 44 (1995): 359367.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Taylor, W. P., and Plowright, W.. “Studies on the Pathogenesis of Rinderpest in Experimental Cattle. III. Proliferation of an Attenuated Strain in Various Tissues Following Subcutaneous Inoculation.” Journal of Hygiene 63:2 (June 1965): 263275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thistle, Mel, Ed. The Mackenzie-McNaughton Wartime Letters. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1975.Google Scholar
Thornton, Philip K.Livestock Production: Recent Trends, Future Prospects.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 365 (2010): 28532867.Google Scholar
Tilly, Helen. Africa as a Living Laboratory: Empire, Development, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge, 1870–1950. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Tounkara, Karim, Nwankpa, Nick, and Bodjo, Charles. “The Role of the African Union Pan African Veterinary Vaccine Centre (AU-PANVAC) in Rinderpest Eradication.” EMPRES: Transboundary Animal Disease Bulletin, 38 (2011): 4345.Google Scholar
Toynbee, Arnold J.Not the Age of Atoms But of Welfare for All.” New York Times (October 21, 1951): 168.Google Scholar
UNRRA. The Story of UNRRA. Washington, DC, 1948.Google Scholar
USDA. The Plum Island Animal Disease Laboratory, Miscellaneous Publication No. 730. Washington, DC: The United States Government Printing Office, September, 1956.Google Scholar
Veen, Tjaart W. Schillhorn van. “One Medicine: The Dynamic Relationship Between Animal and Human Medicine in History and at Present.” Agriculture and Human Values 15 (1998): 115120.Google Scholar
Vernon, James. Hunger: A Modern History. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Vogel, Kathleen M.Pathogen Proliferation: Threats from the Former Soviet Bioweapons Complex.” Politics and the Life Sciences 19:1 (March 2000): 316.Google Scholar
Wadman, Meredith. The Vaccine Race: Science, Politics, and the Human Costs of Defeating Disease. New York: Viking, 2017.Google Scholar
Walker, R. V. L., Griffiths, Henry J., Shope, Richard E., Maurer, Fred D., and Jenkins, Dubois L.. “III: Immunization Experiments with Inactivated Bovine Tissue Vaccines.” American Journal of Veterinary Research 6:23 (April 1946): 145151.Google Scholar
Waller, Richard. “‘Clean’ and ‘Dirty’: Cattle Disease and Control Policy in Colonial Kenya, 1900–40.” The Journal of African History 45:1 (2004): 4580.Google Scholar
Walsh, John. “War on Cattle Disease Divides the Tropics.” Science 237:4820 (September 11, 1987): 12891291.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Jessica. “Colonial Crossings: Social Science, Social Knowledge, and American Power from the Nineteenth Century to the Cold War,” in Cold War Science and the Transatlantic Circulation of Knowledge, History of Science and Medicine Library, V. 51, ed. van Dongen, Jeroen. Leiden: Brill, 2015, 184213.Google Scholar
Webb, James L. A. Humanity’s Burden: A Global History of Malaria. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Wei, C.X. George. Sino-American Relations, 1944–1949. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997.Google Scholar
Weindling, Paul. “Between Bacteriology and Virology: The Development of Typhus Vaccines between the First and Second World Wars.” History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 17:1 (1995): 8190.Google ScholarPubMed
Weindling, Paul. “Philanthropy and World Health: The Rockefeller Foundation and the League of Nations Health Organization.” Minerva 35 (1997): 269281.Google Scholar
Weller, Thomas H. Growing Pathogens in Tissue Cultures. Canton, MI: Science History Publications, 2004.Google Scholar
Wertheim, Joel O. and Kosakovsky Pond, Sergei L.. “Purifying Selection Can Obscure the Age of Viral Lineages.” Molecular Biology and Evolution 28:12 (December 2011): 33553365.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Westad, Odd Arne. The Global Cold War: Third World Interventions and the Making of Our Times. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Wheelis, Mark, Rózsa, Lajos, and Dando, Malcolm, ed. Deadly Cultures. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006.Google Scholar
WHO. “Proceedings of the Global Technical Consultation to Assess the Feasibility of Measles Eradication, 28–30 June 2010.” The Journal of Infectious Diseases 204: Supplement 1 (July 15, 2011).Google Scholar
Wilcox, Francis O.The United Nations Program for Technical Assistance.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 268 (March 1950) 4553.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Lise. “Rinderpest and Mainstream Infectious Disease Concepts in the Eighteenth Century.” Medical History 28 (1984): 129150.Google Scholar
Williams, Andrew J.‘Reconstruction’ Before the Marshall Plan.” Review of International Studies 31:3 (July 2005): 541558.Google Scholar
Wolton, Suke. Lord Hailey, the Colonial Office and the Politics of Race and Empire in the Second World War. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Woodbridge, George. The History of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. V. I. New York: Columbia University Press, 1950.Google Scholar
Woodbridge, George. The History of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. V. II. New York: Columbia University Press, 1950.Google Scholar
Woodbridge, George. The History of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. V. III. New York: Columbia University Press, 1950.Google Scholar
Woodward, Ellen S. “UNRRA and War’s Aftermath.” Social Security Bulletin (November 1945): 10–14.Google Scholar
Worboys, Michael. “Was There a Bacteriological Revolution in Late Nineteenth-Century Medicine?Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 38:1 (2007): 2042.Google Scholar
Wright, Susan, ed. Preventing a Biological Arms Race. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1990.Google Scholar
Yamanouchi, Kazuya. “Scientific Background to the Global Eradication of Rinderpest.” Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology 148 (July 15, 2012): 1215.Google Scholar
Yamanouchi, Kazuya. Sizyo Saidai no Densenbyo, Gyueki. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten, 2009.Google Scholar
Yamanouchi, K. and Barrett, T.. “Progress in the Development of a Heat-Stable Recombinant Rinderpest Vaccine Using an Attenuated Vaccinia Virus Vector.” Scientific and Technical Review of the Office International des Epizooties 13:3 (1994): 721735.Google Scholar
Yamanouchi, K., Barrett, T. and Kai, C.. “New Approaches to the Development of Virus Vaccines for Veterinary Use.” Scientific and Technical Review of the Office International des Epizooties 17:3 (1998): 641653.Google Scholar
Yasumara, Y. and Kawatika, Y.. “Studies on SV40 Virus in Tissue Cultures.” Nihon Rinsho 21 (1963): 12011215.Google Scholar
Yates, P. Lamartine. So Bold an Aim: Ten Years of International Co-operation Toward Freedom from Want. Rome: FAO, 1955.Google Scholar
Youde, Jeremy. “Cattle Scourge No More: The Eradication of Rinderpest and Its Lessons for Global Health Campaigns.” Politics and the Life Sciences 32:1 (Spring 2013): 4357.Google Scholar
Zanasi, Margherita. “Exporting Development: The League of Nations and Republican China.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 49:1 (2007): 143169.Google Scholar
Zanasi, Margherita. Saving the Nation: Economic Modernity in Republican China. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zeiler, Thomas W.Opening Doors in the World Economy,” in Global Interdependence. ed. Iriye, Akira. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014, 203361.Google Scholar
Zeiler, Thomas W. Free Trade, Free World: The Advent of GATT. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Zinsser, Hans. As I Remember Him: The Biography of R.S. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1940.Google Scholar
Zinsser, Hans. Rats, Lice and History. 1935, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2008.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×