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Ways of knowing the health of livestock populations: The age of surveys, 1928-65

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 12:48 authored by Abigail WoodsAbigail Woods

This article advances historical understandings of health, veterinary medicine and livestock agriculture by examining how, in mid-20th century Britain, the diseases of livestock were made collectively knowable. During this period, the state extended its gaze beyond a few, highly impactful notifiable diseases to a host of other threats to livestock health. The prime mechanism through which this was achieved was the disease survey. Paralleling wider developments in survey practices, it grew from small interwar beginnings into a hugely expensive, wide-ranging state veterinary project that created a new conception of the nation’s livestock, as a geographical aggregation of animals in varying states of health. This article traces the disease survey’s entanglements with dairy cows, farming practices, veterinary professional politics, and government agendas. I show that far from a neutral reflection of reality, surveys both represented and perpetuated specific versions of dairy cow health, varieties of farming practice, and visions of the veterinary professional role. At first, their findings proved influential, but over time they found it harder to discipline their increasingly complex human, animal. and microbial subjects, resulting in unconvincing representations of reality that led ultimately to their marginalization.

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities Executive Office (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Medical History

Volume

67

Issue

3

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

ISSN

0025-7273

eISSN

2048-8343

Date Submitted

2023-10-16

Date Accepted

2023-02-08

Date of First Publication

2023-09-05

Date of Final Publication

2023-09-05

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-05-05

ePrints ID

56371

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