Abstract
Harmonisation of disease management practices across global space and the devolution of
responsibility to a broader range of actors are two increasingly important approaches for
ordering biosecurity governance. While these forms of ordering have been examined
individually, the social science biosecurity literature provides limited insights into how
they interact and interfere with one another, and the consequences for biosecurity
implementation. This paper draws upon an institutional logics approach to examine the
different and competing logics through which government agencies, industry bodies and
farming enterprises engage in biosecurity. It focuses specifically on the ways in which
these logics pose challenges for harmonisation of biosecurity as well as create
alternative spaces of negotiation for making life safe. Through the analysis of policy
documents and semi-structured interviews with government and industry stakeholders, as
well as with beef producers, we identify three institutional logics being the
Keywords
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