Post
Published on January 17, 2025

Dahdaleh Institute research fellows Chloe Clifford Astbury and Kirsten Lee, faculty fellows Shital Desai, Tarra Penney, and Cary Wu, and interim director Mary Wiktorowicz recently published a paper in BMJ Global Health titled, "Wildlife policy, the food system and One Health: a complex systems analysis of unintended consequences for the prevention of emerging zoonoses in China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Philippines."
The paper looks at preventing zoonotic spillover as a complex system problem and uses archetypes to examine unintended consequences of policies — fixes that fail.
Some key findings:
- 📖 A systems perspective was used to illustrate how system adaptation may lead to the failure of prevention policies focused on wildlife.
- 🏛️ The ‘fixes that fail’ archetype emerges from actors with different goals unknowingly working at cross-purposes within a system, which can drive unintended consequences or policy failure.
- 🌍 Considering three case-study countries—China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and the Philippines—they identify how this adaptation may impact zoonotic risk and food system outcomes.
Tension was found between the:
✅ policy goals of conservation and sustainable resources management;
✅ profit-seeking goals of local and global actors who exploit these resources, and
✅ goals of some local community members to maintain access to area that have cultural and religious meaning.
Led by Chloe Clifford Astbury and Tarra L Penney of Global Food System & Policy Research, this collaborative research would not have been possible without our local and global colleagues including Kirsten Lee, Mary Wiktorowicz, Shital Desai, Valentina De Leon, Dr. Marc Yambayamba, Helene Carabin, Eduardo Gallo-Cajiao, Russel Aguilar, Mala Ali Mapatano, Angran Li, Kathleen Chelsea Tongo, Zhilei Shi, Zhuoyu Wang, Cary Wu, Janielle Clarke, Krishihan Sivapragasam.
Astbury, Chloe Clifford, Demeshko, Anastassia, Aguilar, R., Mapatano, M. A., Li, A., Togño, K. C., Shi, Z., Wang, Z., Wu, Cary, Yambayamba, M. K., Carabin, H., Clarke, J., De Leon, Valentina, Desai, Shital, Gallo-Cajiao, E., Lee, Kirsten M., Sivapragasam, K., Wiktorowicz, Mary, & Penney, Tarra L. (2025). Wildlife policy, the food system and One Health: a complex systems analysis of unintended consequences for the prevention of emerging zoonoses in China, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Philippines. BMJ Global Health, 10(1), e016313. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2024-016313
Themes | Global Health Foresighting |
Status | Active |
Related Work | |
Updates |
N/A
|
People |
Mary E. Wiktorowicz, Interim Director - Active
Tarra Penney, Interim Associate Director - Active Shital Desai, Faculty Fellow, School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design - Active Kirsten Lee, CIHR Health System Impact Fellow - Active Chloe Clifford Astbury, Research Fellow, Global Food System & Policy - Alum Cary Wu, Faculty Fellow, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies - Active Anastassia Demeshko, Visiting Scholar, Global Food System & Policy - Alum Valentina De Leon, Junior Research Assistant, Global Food System & Policy - Alum |
You may also be interested in...
Recap – Examining Civilian Protection in Contemporary Conflicts
The panel discussion on ‘The Global Future of Civilian Protection: Learning from the Gaza Genocide’, was moderated by Sarah Khan. It brought together scholars and practitioners to examine how the “Gaza Playbook” has reshaped norms around the protection of civilians and what this means in the current ...Read more about this Post
Study shows tuberculosis treatment goes beyond medicine
Originally published by YFile (25 March 2026) By Alexander Huls A new study by York researchers reveals how tuberculosis (TB) can disrupt work, relationships and daily life, leaving lasting effects even after treatment ends. “For ...Read more about this Post
Seventeen Exceptional Scholars Awarded 2025-2026 Dahdaleh Global Health Graduate Scholarships
The Dahdaleh Institute is delighted to announce this year's recipients of the 2025-2026 Dahdaleh Global Health Graduate Scholarships, and we extend our warmest congratulations to the following recipients: "We are proud and elated to support ...Read more about this Post
