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A Bird Flu Over the Commie NestMassachusetts Institute of Technology Publication DateFebruary 29, 2008
Summary
Using the avian flu epidemic of West Bengal, India, as an example, Abhijit Banerjee comments on people's belief or disbelief in government crisis warnings and how disbelief stems from already-undermined state authority. In this case, lack of trust has resulted in hiding birds and driving them across state borders to sell them and has necessitated on-the-spot government compensation, rather than promise of payment, for the culling of poultry. He traces the public reaction to their perception of government credibility - or lack of credibility - in representing the public interest in the kind of crisis which allows no time for public debate or popular mandate. He states that years of compromises and favouritism have left the government without an automatic claim to authority because people treat "any declaration of government policy, mostly correctly, not as a necessary, decisive move, but as the opening gambit in a long political game." ContactAbhijit Banerjee
SourceEmail from Nalaka Gunawardene to The Communication Initiative on March 23 2008 and Down to Earth Magazine, February 29 2008 issue. Placed on the Communication Initiative site March 26 2008 Last Updated April 18 2008 |
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