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Rabid Epidemiologies: The Emergence and Resurgence of Rabies in Twentieth Century South Africa

  • Special issue: Environmental History
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Abstract

This article discusses the history of rabies in South Africa since the early twentieth century. It argues that rabies is a zoonotic disease that traverses rural and urban spaces, that transfers itself between wild and domestic animals and remains a potential threat to human life in the region. Scientists discovered an indigenous form of rabies, found primarily in the yellow mongoose, after the first biomedically confirmed human fatalities in 1928. Since the 1950s canine rabies, presumed to have moved southwards from across the Zambezi River, has become endemic also. South Africa is home to a comparatively large number of rabies strains and animal carriers, making it a particularly interesting case study. Environmental changes during the colonial and apartheid periods have helped to explain the increase in rabies cases since the mid-twentieth century. Moreover, developments in the biological and ecological sciences have provided insights into why the rabies virus has become endemic in certain wildlife species.

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Correspondence to Karen Brown.

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Brown, K. Rabid Epidemiologies: The Emergence and Resurgence of Rabies in Twentieth Century South Africa. J Hist Biol 44, 81–101 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10739-010-9241-9

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