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117
result(s) for
"Zilinskas, Raymond A"
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Take Russia to 'task' on bioweapons transparency
2012
In the run-up to his reelection, Russian president Vladimir Putin outlined 28 tasks to be undertaken by his administration, including one that commanded the development of weapons based on “genetic principles.” Political pressure must be applied by governments and professional societies to ensure that there is not a modern reincarnation of the Soviet biological warfare program.
Journal Article
Mongolia Today
by
Dendevin Badarch
,
Raymond A. Zilinskas
in
20th century
,
Asian Studies
,
Asian Studies (General)
2015,2003
This is a wide-ranging collection of essays written by experts in the field. The variety of topics provide an interdisciplinary approach to the study of contemporary Mongolia. Topics include the impact of industrialization in Mongolia, environmental policies of the nation, the status of modern biotechnology in Mongolia, Mongolian dairy products, traditional husbandry techniques practised by nomadic people, a description of medicinal plants and their uses in Mongolian traditional medicine, descriptions of unique Mongolian birds, fishes and microbiota, discussion of the fascinating flora and fauna of the Gobi region, and a conservation case-study of the endangered Gobi bear.
The Soviet biological weapons program : a history
by
Leitenberg, Milton
,
Zilinskas, Raymond A
,
Kuhn, Jens H
in
Arms control
,
Bacteriological weapons
,
Bioethics
2012
This is the first attempt to understand the broad scope of the USSR's offensive biological weapons research from its inception in the 1920s. Gorbachev tried to end the program, but the US and UK never obtained clear evidence he succeeded, raising the question whether the means for waging biological warfare could be revived in Russia in the future.
The Anti-Plague System and the Soviet Biological Warfare Program
2006
The USSR possessed a unique national public health system that included an agency named \"anti-plague system.\" Its mission was to protect the country from highly dangerous diseases of either natural or laboratory etiology. During the 1960s, the anti-plague system became the lead agency of a program to defend against biological warfare, codenamed Project 5. This responsibility grew and by the middle 1970s came to include undertaking tasks for the offensive biological warfare program, codenamed Ferment. This article describes the anti-plague system's activities relevant to both aspects of the Soviet Union's biological warfare program, offense and defense, and analyzes its contributions to each.
Journal Article
New Considerations in Infectious Disease Outbreaks: The Threat of Genetically Modified Microbes
by
Zilinskas, Raymond A.
,
Gilsdorf, Janet R.
in
Bacterial Infections - epidemiology
,
Bacterial Infections - microbiology
,
Biological and medical sciences
2005
Genetically altered microbes are used widely in the conduct of scientific study and have facilitated the development of new medical therapies, preventive strategies, and diagnostic tools. Unfortunately, such organisms may also cause infectious disease outbreaks as a result of accidental or intentional transmission to humans. The unique microbial properties of genetically altered pathogens and the clinical symptoms exhibited by persons infected with them may impede the usual diagnostic and clinical evaluations or preventive strategies. Practicing physicians and clinicians at microbiology laboratories, who would be the first to observe such infections, must consider the broad clinical possibilities of illnesses caused by deliberately altered microorganisms and the potential difficulty in confirming a diagnosis.
Journal Article
The Soviet Anti-Plague System: An Introduction
by
Zilinskas, Raymond A.
,
Ouagrham-Gormley, Sonia Ben
,
Melikishvili, Alexander
in
Anti-Plague
,
Bacterial diseases
,
Biological and medical sciences
2006
This article describes the composition of the Soviet Anti-plague (AP) system and presents the methodology used by the authors in their study of the AP system.This article describes the composition of the Soviet Anti-plague (AP) system and presents the methodology used by the authors in their study of the AP system.
Journal Article
What Non-Proliferation Policy for the Soviet Anti-Plague System?
by
Zilinskas, Raymond A.
,
Ouagrham-Gormley, Sonia Ben
,
Melikishvili, Alexander
in
Anti-Plague System
,
Bacterial diseases
,
Biological and medical sciences
2006
This article analyzes the proliferation challenges posed by the Soviet AP system and discusses possible nonproliferation strategies to prevent these threats.This article analyzes the proliferation challenges posed by the Soviet AP system and discusses possible nonproliferation strategies to prevent these threats.
Journal Article
Innovation, Dual Use, and Security
by
Tucker, Jonathan B.
,
Danzig, Richard
in
Biological weapons
,
Biotechnology
,
Biotechnology -- Social aspects
2012
Recent advances in disciplines such as biotechnology, nanotechnology, and neuropharmacology entail a \"dual-use dilemma\" because they promise benefits for human health and welfare yet pose the risk of misuse for hostile purposes. The emerging field of synthetic genomics, for example, can produce custom DNA molecules for life-saving drugs but also makes possible the creation of deadly viral agents for biological warfare or terrorism. The challenge for policymakers is to prevent the misuse of these new technologies without forgoing their benefits . Innovation, Dual Use, and Security offers a systematic approach for managing the dual-use dilemma. The book presents a \"decision framework\" for assessing the security risks of emerging technologies and fashioning governance strategies to manage those risks. This framework is applied to fourteen contemporary case studies, including synthetic genomics, DNA shuffling and directed evolution, combinatorial chemistry, protein engineering, immunological modulation, and aerosol vaccines. The book also draws useful lessons from two historical cases: the development of the V-series nerve agents in Britain and the use and misuse of LSD by the U.S. Army and the CIA. Innovation, Dual Use, and Security offers a comprehensive, multifaceted introduction to the challenges of governing dual-use technologies in an era of rapid innovation. The book will be of interest to government officials and other practitioners as well as to students and scholars in security studies, science and technology studies, biology, and chemistry.