Ouvrages publiés en collaboration (1)

  1. 1. Shaw, A. P. M., Hendrickx, G., Gilbert, M., Mattioli, R., Codjia, V., Dao, B., Diall, O., Mahama, C., Sidibé, I., & Wint, W. (2006). Mapping the benefits: a new decision tool for tsetse and trypanosomiasis interventions. Rome, Italy: Department for International Development, Animal Health Programme, Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine, University of Edinburgh, UK and Programme Against African Trypanosomiasis, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
  2.   Ouvrages édités à titre de seul éditeur ou en collaboration (1)

  3. 1. Decharneux, B., Lemaire, J. C., Sylin, M., Sizaire, V. V., Klein, O., Lemaire, L., Wilkin, A., Gilbert, M., Heinderyckx, F., Wagner-Egger, P., Niewenhuys, C., Pinsart, M.-G., & André, V. (2022). Que retenir de la crise sanitaire ?
  4.   Parties d'ouvrages collectifs (9)

  5. 1. Wallace, R. G., Gilbert, M., Wallace, R., Pittiglio, C., Mattioli, R., & Kock, R. (2016). Did Ebola emerge in West Africa by a policy-driven phase change in agroecology? In Neoliberal Ebola: Modeling Disease Emergence from Finance to Forest and Farm (pp. 1-12). Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-40940-5_1
  6. 2. Wallace, R. G., Kock, R., Bergmann, L., Gilbert, M., Hogerwerf, L., Pittiglio, C., Mattioli, R., & Wallace, R. (2016). Did neoliberalizing West Africa’s forests produce a vaccine-resistant Ebola? In Neoliberal Ebola: Modeling Disease Emergence from Finance to Forest and Farm (pp. 55-68). Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-40940-5_3
  7. 3. Wallace, R. G., Bergmann, L., Hogerwerf, L., & Gilbert, M. (2010). Are influenzas in Southern China byproducts of the region's globalizing historical present? In Influenza and Public Health: Learning from Past Pandemics (pp. 101-144). Earthscan. doi:10.4324/9781849776448
  8. 4. Wallace, R. G., Bergmann, L., Hogerwerf, L., & Gilbert, M. (2010). Are Influenzas in Southern China Byproducts of the Region’s Globalising Historical Present ? In T. Giles-Vernick, S. Craddock, & J. L. Gun (Eds.), Influenza and Public Health: Learning from Past Pandemics (pp. 101-144). Londres: Earthscan.
  9. 5. Gilbert, M. (2010). Intensification de l’élevage et émergence de pathogènes. In M. Gauthier-Clerc & F. Thomas (Eds.), Ecologie de la santé et biodiversité. De Boeck.
  10. 6. Augustin, S., Kenis, M., Valade, R., Gilbert, M., Garcia, J., Roques, A., Lopez-Vaamonde, A., & Lopez-Vaamonde, C. (2010). A Stowaway Specias from the Balkans: The Horse Chestnut Leafminer, Cameraria ohridella (2010). In J. Settele, L. Penev, T. Georgiev, R. Grabaum, V. Grobelnik, V. Hammen, S. Klotz, M. Kotarac, & I. Kuhn (Eds.), Atlas of Biodiversity Risk (pp. 160-161). Sofia / Moscow: Pensoft publishers.
  11. 7. Grégoire, J.-C., Gilbert, M., De Cannière, C., & Delplace, D. (2009). Méthodes d’évaluation des attaques d'Ips typographus (Coleoptera, Scolytinae) en pessière. In Y. Birot, G. Landmann, & I. Bonhème (Eds.), La forêt face aux tempêtes. Versailles: Quae éditions.
  12. 8. Gilbert, M., & Sauvard, D. (2004). The BAWBILT database: Gathering and sharing information related to BAWBILT organisms. In F. Lieutier, K. Day, A. Battisti, J.-C. Grégoire, & H. Evans (Eds.), Bark and Wood Boring Insects in Living Trees in Europe: A Synthesis (pp. 15-18). Dordrecht: Kluwer.
  13. 9. Gilbert, M., Jenner, C., Penders, J., Rogers, D., Slingenbergh, J., & Wint, W. (2001). The Programme Against African Trypanosomiasis Information System (PAATIS). In S. Black & R. J. Seed (Eds.), World Class Parasites, Vol. 1. The African Trypanosomes (pp. 11-22). Kluwer Academic Publishe.
  14.   Articles dans des revues avec comité de lecture (167)

  15. 1. Van Borm, S., Boseret, G., Dellicour, S., Steensels, M., Roupie, V., Vandenbussche, F., Mathijs, E., Vilain, A., Driesen, M., Dispas, M., Delcloo, A., Lemey, P., Mertens, I., Gilbert, M., Lambrecht, B., & Van Den Berg, T. (2023). Combined Phylogeographic Analyses and Epidemiologic Contact Tracing to Characterize Atypically Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H3N1) Epidemic, Belgium, 2019. Emerging infectious diseases, 29(2), 351-359. doi:10.3201/eid2902.220765

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