Securitising Biotic Risk: Reframing Biosecurity in China
Xinxin Duan, Oliver Fritsch, Simon J. McKirdy, Dan Zheng- Strategy and Management
- Political Science and International Relations
- Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
- Public Administration
- Sociology and Political Science
Abstract
This article offers an in‐depth analysis of the meaning and scope of biosafety and biosecurity in China, thereby relating domestic debates to global developments, exploring notions of safety and security in public policy more broadly and embedding a key policy initiative, Chinaʼs new Biosecurity Law, into attempts by Chinaʼs leadership to develop a holistic national security strategy. The article finds that biotic threats have more recently been reframed as matters of national security, in ways that undeniably go beyond conventional understandings of biosecurity and that blur the boundaries to more accident‐focused biosafety measures. Given Chinaʼs political and economic importance this apparent trend to securitise biotic risks is likely to impact on global trade relations, international transport and passenger traffic, not the least in the context of the Belt and Road Initiative.