Representing Ebola addresses the legal and cultural facets of the latest West African Ebola outbreak for both an academic and general audience.
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Arguing About the Cultural and Legal Meanings of the 2013-2015 West African Ebola Outbreak
Chapter 2: NGO Organizational Tales, the Discovery of "Patient Zero," and MSF's Stories about the Origins of the 2013-2015 West African Ebola Outbreak
Chapter 3: The Legal and Ethical Duties that are Owed to "Contact Tracers" and Other West African Volunteers
Chapter 4: The Saga of Kaci Hickox and the Nature, Scope, and Limits of Human Rights Discourses in Ebola Contexts
Chapter 5: The IMF, the World Bank, and Debates about the Role of Political Economy in Ebola Outbreak Contexts
Chapter 6: Anticipating the Ebola Apocalypse and American Mediascapes
Chapter 7: Liberia's 2014 Autoimmunization of the West Point Suburb and the Return of the Colonial Cordon Sanitaire
Chapter 8: Belated Military Humanitarianism and American "Ebola Exceptionalism" During the West African Ebola Outbreak, 2014-2015
Chapter 9: The Legal and Cultural Legacies of the 2013-2015 West African Outbreak
Bibliography
About the Author