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A Decade in Biosecurity

(Biosecurity and Bioterrorism) Special feature of the journal Biosecurity and Bioterrorism now available. Open access to the articles in this feature is available until April 12, 2012. These peer-reviewed articles, authored by leaders in the field, describe the current state of affairs in biosecurity policy and practice, identify remaining challenges, and  Read More »

Dual use education in neuroscience

(The Royal Society – Blog) Dealing with the challenge of the hostile exploitation of neurobiology, as with a number of developments in the life sciences and chemistry, is going to require a range of activities at different levels; one aspect of which involves building awareness of the concerns of the security  Read More »

US Requires New Dual-Use Biological Research Reviews

(Science AAAS) The new DURC policy—months in the making, and in part a reaction to the ongoing controversy over research involving the H5N1 avian flu viruses—will expand current reviews already conducted by two major biomedical research funding agencies, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Centers for Disease Control and  Read More »

Flu surveillance lacking

(Nature.com) When researchers created strains of the H5N1 avian influenza virus that could spread easily between mammals, they argued that their work would aid in surveillance, by identifying mutations to watch for in the wild. But an analysis by Nature paints a dire picture of how animal flu viruses are being  Read More »

Journals Pursue Guidelines on Publishing Sensitive Disease Research

(Global Security Newswire) Editors for two scientific journals are developing plans for balancing scientific interests and security concerns in publishing potential future research that could have biological weapons applications, the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy reported on Wednesday. Clinical Infectious Diseases and the Journal of Infectious Diseases “are developing  Read More »