Scientific conviction amidst scientific controversy in the transatlantic livestock and meat trade
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A century before bovine spongiform encephalopathy, Great Britain and North America grappled with an equally maddening disease in cattle: pleuro-pneumonia. The subject of a decades-long trade dispute in the nineteenth-century transatlantic region, pleuro-pneumonia attracted the attention of livestock farmers, diplomats, shipping moguls, veterinarians, public health regulators, and journalists. Scientific controversy aggravated the dispute; veterinary officials elaborated scientific opinions and regulatory orders amidst a prevailing confusion about microbiology and disease diagnostics. In this context emerged William Williams, an Edinburgh-based professor whose convictions spawned repeated disagreements with the British government’s diagnoses of pleuro-pneumonia in cattle from the United States and Canada.