1. See, for instance, Francis, L.P., Battin, M.P., Jacobson, J.A., Smith, C.B., and Botkin, J. 2005. “How infectious diseases got left out—And what this omission might have meant for bioethics,” Bioethics 19(4): 307–322.
2. Cooper, R. and Law, J. 1995. “Organization: Distal and proximal views,” in S.B. Bacharach, P. Gagliardi, and B. Mundell (eds). Research in the Sociology of Organizations: Studies of Organizations in the European Tradition. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.
3. Although there have been those that have crossed over this divide, for instance, Wright, S. (ed.). 2001. Biological Warfare and Disarmament. London: Rowman & Littlefield; and
4. Green, S. 2005. “E3LSI research: An essential element of biodefense,” Biosecurity and Bioterrorism 3(2): 128–137.
5. Lock, Margaret. 2001. Twice Dead. London: University of California Press.