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- Biosecurity - Wikipedia
Biosecurity refers to measures aimed at preventing the introduction or spread of harmful organisms (e g viruses, bacteria, plants, animals etc ) intentionally or unintentionally outside their native range or within new environments
- Biosecurity: 1. 1. Introduction: what is biosecurity? - GreenFacts
Biosecurity covers food safety, zoonoses, the introduction of animal and plant diseases and pests, the introduction and release of living modified organisms (LMOs) and their products (e g genetically modified organisms or GMOs), and the introduction and management of invasive alien species
- What is Biosecurity — Explained - nti. org
We define biosecurity as: policies and practices that protect against the deliberate misuse of biology to cause harm This is designed to encompass a wide range of potential threats, and to be responsive to emerging technologies
- Biosecurity | NIST
How Secure Is Your DNA? Was this page helpful?
- Biosecurity Really: A Strategy for Victory - Hoover Institution
Drawing on decades of experience and the knowledge of dozens of subject matter experts, Biosecurity Really offers a forward-looking analysis of how global trends and technologies are reshaping the biosecurity landscape, and actionable steps we can take to respond
- Biosecurity Central
Biosecurity Central is a publicly available web-based library that helps users find relevant and reliable sources of information for key areas of biosecurity The site aims to widely disseminate and share knowledge to help advance biosafety and biosecurity
- New report urges critical action to address growing biosecurity risks
The report warns that biosecurity risks are increasing Emerging technologies and other trends are making biological threats more numerous, frequent, and consequential
- Biosafety, biosecurity, and bioethics - PMC
While it is often assumed that biosafety is a purely technical matter that has little to do with philosophy or the humanities, biosafety raises important ethical issues that have not been adequately examined in the scientific or bioethics literature
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