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Strategic Science in the Public Interest

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The past twenty years have seen considerable shifts and struggles in 'government science' - that is, in the way the state funds, supports, regulates, conducts and uses scientific and technological activity.

Focusing on federal labs and agencies, Strategic Science in the Public Interest explores how these labs have been located within, and often buried by, the larger commercially-focused federal innovation agenda. G. Bruce Doern and Jeffrey S. Kinder examine four labs whose mandates deal with the Alberta oil sands, environmental technologies, wildlife research, and mining and metals, respectively.

The authors use these cases to explain why a better middle-level approach to analysis is needed for strategic public interest-centred government science.

They illustrate the importance of understanding the variety, as well as the similarity, of federal science and technology labs and agencies, and of instituting policies that reflect this diversity.

The growing importance of Related Science Activities (RSA) is also explored, as well as the core trade-offs between commercial and public goods science in their mandates and their internal capacities.

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£42.40 Save 20.00%
RRP £53.00
Product Details
University of Toronto Press
0802088538 / 9780802088536
Hardback
21/07/2007
Canada
224 pages, 58 b&w illustrations, 1 b&w table
161 x 237 mm, 520 grams