Content
October 2008, Volume 35, Issue 8
- 551-560 Nuclear futures: anticipatory knowledge, expert judgment, and the lack that cannot be filled
by Hugh Gusterson - 561-573 ‘Iraqi Winnebagos™ of death’: imagined and realized futures of US bioweapons threat assessments
by Kathleen M Vogel - 575-583 Ageing or silvering? Political debate about ageing in the Netherlands
by Martijn van der Steen - 585-596 Designing epidemics: models, policy-making, and global foreknowledge in India's AIDS epidemic
by Manjari Mahajan - 597-606 Thinking longer term about technology: is there value in science fiction-inspired approaches to constructing futures?
by Clark A Miller & Ira Bennett - 607-617 A system approach to tertiary education institutions: towards knowledge networks and enhanced societal trust
by Manuel Heitor - 618-620 Inventions and innovations in the electrical and communications sectors: a historical perspective
by Rainer Frietsch - 620-620 Something for everyone: a real smorgasbörd for science and technology studies
by Adam Holbrook - 621-623 Joseph Schumpeter's life and legacy
by Richard Hawkins
August 2008, Volume 35, Issue 7
- 462-474 From ivory tower to factory floor? How universities are changing to meet the needs of industry
by Will Geoghegan & Dimitrios Pontikakis - 475-487 ‘Governing’ nanotechnology without government?
by Diana M Bowman & Graeme A Hodge - 489-499 The bottom-up meanings of the concept of public participation in science and technology
by Ulrike Felt & Maximilian Fochler - 501-513 Virtues and limits of competitive funds to finance research and innovation: The case of Mexican agriculture
by Alexandre Vera-Cruz & Gabriela Dutrenit & Griselda Martinez & Arturo Torres-Vargas & Javier Ekboir - 515-526 Research and development in the services sector of an emerging economy: The case of South Africa
by Michael Kahn & Lidwine Hounwanou - 527-541 Scientists who engage with society perform better academically
by Pablo Jensen & Jean-Baptiste Rouquier & Pablo Kreimer & Yves Croissant - 543-544 Building institutions for effective policymaking
by Monica Salazar
July 2008, Volume 35, Issue 6
- 379-390 Foreign-owned subsidiaries: A neglected nexus between foreign direct investment, industrial and innovation policies
by Ionara Costa & Sergey Filippov - 391-402 Standardising through concepts: The power of scientific experts in international standard-setting
by David Demortain - 403-416 Stimulating renewable energy technologies by innovation policy
by Simona O Negro & Marko P Hekkert & Ruud E H M Smits - 417-430 Diffusion of knowledge through migration of scientific labour in India
by Dinar Kale & David Wield & Joanna Chataway - 431-443 The triple helix strategy for universities in developing countries: The experiences in Malaysia and Algeria
by Mohammed Saad & Girma Zawdie & Chandra Malairaja - 445-457 Science policy and the driving forces behind the internationalisation of science: The case of Norway
by Dag W Aksnes & Nicoline Frølich & Stig Slipersæter - 459-460 Thinking with networks
by Gwendolyn Blue
June 2008, Volume 35, Issue 5
- 302-318 How to sponsor ground-breaking research: A comparison of funding schemes
by Thomas Heinze - 319-334 China's bid to become a global nanotech leader: Advancing nanotechnology through state-led programs and international collaborations
by Richard P Appelbaum & Rachel A Parker - 335-345 Does collective learning in clusters contribute to innovation?
by Anja Cotic-Svetina & Marko Jaklic & Igor Prodan - 347-360 The uneven spread of global science: Patterns of international collaboration in global environmental change research
by Anita Engels & Tina Ruschenburg - 361-371 The dynamics of science in a small country: The case of Luxembourg
by Morgan B Meyer - 373-374 Institutional reform in American medical research
by Ronnie Ramlogan - 374-375 Doing big science: A sociological perspective
by Alan Astbury
May 2008, Volume 35, Issue 4
- 227-239 Organising the political coordination of knowledge and innovation policies
by Dietmar Braun - 241-252 Assessing policy coordination capacity: Higher education, science, and technology policies in Finland
by Antti Pelkonen & Tuula Teräväinen & Suvi-Tuuli Waltari - 253-264 The superministry approach: Integrated governance of science, technology and innovation with contracted autonomy
by Christian Koch - 265-276 Coordination within fragmentation: Governance in knowledge policy in the German federal system
by Jakob Edler & Stefan Kuhlmann - 277-288 The political coordination of knowledge and innovation policies in Switzerland
by Thomas Griessen & Dietmar Braun - 289-298 Lessons on the political coordination of knowledge and innovation policies
by Dietmar Braun
April 2008, Volume 35, Issue 3
- 146-158 Does competitive research funding encourage diversity in higher education?
by Hugo Horta & Jeroen Huisman & Manuel Heitor - 159-170 Evaluating the strategy of local public technology centers in regional innovation systems: Evidence from Japan
by Nobuya Fukugawa - 171-182 Token endeavors: The significance of academic spin-offs in technology transfer and research policy in Germany
by Andreas Knie & Martin Lengwiler - 183-196 Delegation of authority in research funding to networks: Experiences with a multiple goal boundary organization
by Laurens Klerkx & Cees Leeuwis - 197-205 The laboratory of public debate: Understanding the acceptability of stem cell research
by Maja Horst - 207-220 Scientists and policy-makers at work: Listening to epistemic conversations in a genetics science network
by Fiona Miller - 221-222 Transition policies: Austrian research and technology 1945–2005
by Raoul Kneucker - 223-224 What makes New York vibrant?
by Michael H Goldhaber
March 2008, Volume 35, Issue 2
- 67-80 University spin-off firms: Lessons from ten years of experience in Europe
by Philippe Mustar & Mike Wright & Bart Clarysse - 81-94 Private sector involvement in science and innovation policy-making in Hungary
by Annamária Inzelt - 95-105 Lay perceptions of nuclear fusion: multiple modes of understanding
by Christian Oltra & Rosario Solá - 107-119 Assessing economic effects: Co-existence of genetically modified maize in agriculture in France and Germany
by Klaus Menrad & Daniela Reitmeier - 121-138 Evaluating technology oversight through multiple frameworks: A case study of genetically engineered cotton in India
by Kana Talukder & Jennifer Kuzma - 139-143 Intellectual property regulation and international trade: National and global economic perspectives
by Alexander Cuntz
February 2008, Volume 35, Issue 1
- 2-4 Introduction to special issue on biosecurity governance: Containing biological weapons, constraining biological research?
by Jonathan Suk - 5-12 Biosecurity and stakeholders: The rise of networks and non-state actors
by Caitríona McLeish & Daniel Feakes - 13-20 Managing biological disarmament: The UK experience
by Jez Littlewood - 21-27 Toward global harmonization for control of dual-use biothreat agents
by Ronald M Atlas - 29-35 Life scientists and the need for a culture of responsibility: After education … what?
by James Revill & Malcolm Dando - 37-43 The benefits, risks, and threats of biotechnology
by Brian Rappert - 45-54 Framing biosecurity: An alternative to the biotech revolution model?
by Kathleen M Vogel - 55-64 Countering misuse of life sciences through regulatory multiplicity
by Filippa Lentzos
December 2007, Volume 34, Issue 10
- 679-680 Evidence never lies: Introduction to a special issue on New Frontiers in Evaluation
by Nicholas S Vonortas & Michael Stampfer & Klaus Zinöcker - 681-690 Mapping the frontiers of evaluation of public-sector R&D programs
by Irwin Feller - 691-698 Focal randomisation: An optimal mechanism for the evaluation of R&D projects
by Elise S Brezis - 699-708 ‘Real options’ framework to assess public research investments
by Nicholas S Vonortas & Chintal A Desai - 709-721 Indicators of higher-education institutes and public-research organizations technology transfer activities: Insights from France
by Laurent Bach & Patrick Llerena - 723-730 Quantitative portfolio evaluation of US federal research and development programs
by Rosalie T Ruegg - 731-741 A theory-based innovation systems framework for evaluating diverse portfolios of research, part two: Macro indicators and policy interventions
by Jerald Hage & Gretchen Jordan & Jonathan Mote - 743-752 What lies beneath: Avoiding the risk of under-evaluation
by Luke Georghiou - 753-754 Can you grow it?
by Cooper H Langford - 754-756 Value of national innovation system approach
by Liu Xielin - 756-757 Innovation for the future
by Jody A Roberts
November 2007, Volume 34, Issue 9
- 606-618 Learning from abroad: The Austrian competence centre programme Kplus
by Peter Biegelbauer - 619-631 Academic entrepreneurship: Social norms, university culture and policies
by Pontus Braunerhjelm - 633-643 Using the boundaries of science to do boundary-work among scientists: Pollution and purity claims
by Brendon Swedlow - 644-656 New instruments in innovation policy: The case of the Department of Trade and Industry in the UK
by Isabel Maria Bodas Freitas - 657-670 The value lab: Exploring moral frameworks in the deliberation of values in the animal biotechnology debate
by Linda Krijgsman & Henriette Bout & Tjard de Cock Buning - 671-673 Critical contribution to innovation studies
by David A Wolfe - 673-676 Dimensions of the analysis of clusters
by Elvira Uyarra
October 2007, Volume 34, Issue 8
- 538-542 Introduction: Future pathways for science policy and research assessment: Metrics vs peer review, quality vs impact
by Claire Donovan - 543-553 Peer review and the relevance gap: Ten suggestions for policy-makers
by Paul Nightingale & Alister Scott - 555-563 Evaluating universities using simple scientometric research-output metrics: Total citation counts per university for a retrospective seven-year rolling sample
by Bruce G Charlton & Peter Andras - 565-574 Assessing university research: A plea for a balanced approach
by Linda Butler - 575-583 The future of research evaluation rests with an intelligent combination of advanced metrics and transparent peer review
by Henk F Moed - 585-597 The qualitative future of research evaluation
by Claire Donovan - 599-601 A new European S&T governance
by Terttu Luukkonen - 601-602 Lack of balance
by Sujatha Raman - 603-604 Smart and snappy
by Ross Beveridge
August 2007, Volume 34, Issue 7
- 454-474 European asymmetries: A comparative analysis of German and UK biotechnology clusters
by Philip Cooke - 475-488 Risk financing for knowledge-based enterprises: Mechanisms and policy options
by Guy Ben-Ari & Nicholas S Vonortas - 489-499 Assessing human resources for science and technology: The 3Ds framework
by Sami Mahroum - 501-513 The research entrepreneur: Strategic positioning of the researcher in his societal environment
by Kasia Kurek & Peter A T M Geurts & Hans E Roosendaal - 515-528 Burying globally, acting locally: Control and co-option in nuclear waste management
by Darrin Durant - 529-531 Transformation to a knowledge-based economy
by Michael Dinges - 531-532 Of vital importance but disappointing
by David Turnbull - 532-533 Challenge faced by innovative firms
by Naubahar Sharif - 534-535 Broadband penetration
by Rodrigo Fernós
July 2007, Volume 34, Issue 6
- 370-371 The power of indicators: Introduction to special issue on public project funding of research
by Benedetto Lepori - 372-388 Comparing the evolution of national research policies: What patterns of change?
by Stig Slipersæter & Jean Thèves & Barend van der Meulen - 389-399 Changing patterns of public research funding in France
by Jean Thèves & Benedetto Lepori & Philippe Larédo - 401-415 Between policy and science: Research councils' responsiveness in Austria, Norway and Switzerland
by Stig Slipersæter & Benedetto Lepori & Michael Dinges - 417-430 Changing allocation models for public research funding: An empirical exploration based on project funding data
by Bianca Potì & Emanuela Reale - 431-443 Monitoring sector specialisation of public and private funded business research and development
by Rainer Frietsch & Aris Kaloudis - 445-447 Global environmental assessments: How to get it right
by Stelvia Matos - 447-449 Shifts in academic disciplines from a constructivist view
by Saul Fisher - 449-450 Einstein: A miraculous year one century later
by Barry C Sanders - 450-452 Governing technology by intellectual property rights
by Mark Winskel
June 2007, Volume 34, Issue 5
- 303-316 Explaining poor performance of European science: Institutions versus policies
by Andrea Bonaccorsi - 317-328 A principal-agent model of public research with a retrospective payoff rule
by Remo Fernández-Carro - 329-343 Innovation processes in governance: The development of ‘emissions trading’ as a new policy instrument
by Jan-Peter Voß - 345-354 Suspicious cartographers: Some realities of research into stakeholder understanding of the causes and possible prevention of breast cancer
by Steve Cinderby & Laura Potts - 355-363 Merton and Ziman's modes of science: The case of biological and similar material transfer agreements
by Victor Rodriguez - 364-367 From Aarhus to your house: The science and society interface
by John Rigby
May 2007, Volume 34, Issue 4
- 231-232 Introduction to special issue on governing technology for development
by Giles Mohan & Helen Yanacopulos - 233-238 Governing and democratising technology for development: Bridging theory and practice
by Giles Mohan & Helen Yanacopulos - 239-249 The legitimation of GMO governance in Africa
by Seife Ayele - 251-260 Technology, governance and place: Situating biotechnology in Kenya
by Matthew Harsh & James Smith - 261-271 The contested politics of technology: Biotech in Bangalore
by Ian Scoones - 273-283 The governance of nanotechnology
by Jim Whitman - 284-298 Scientific mobility policies: How Portuguese scientists envisage the return home
by Margarida Fontes - 299-300 A toolbox for complexity research
by Cooper H Langford
April 2007, Volume 34, Issue 3
- 158-168 University-industry collaboration: The network embeddedness approach
by Taran Thune - 169-183 Ex-ante impact assessment of research programmes: The experience of the European Union's 7th Framework Programme
by Henri Delanghe & Ugur Muldur - 185-197 Traditional knowledge and intellectual property protection: Past and future
by Pranav N Desai - 199-211 Mode 2 knowledge production: Evidence from orphan drug networks
by Helen Crompton - 213-225 Providing “thoughtful feedback”: Public participation in the regulation of Australia's first genetically modified food crop
by Kerry Ross - 226-227 From conceptual modeling to quantitative measure
by Benedetto Lepori - 227-228 Katherine Hayles' third way towards posthumanity
by Yu-Wei Lin
March 2007, Volume 34, Issue 2
- 83-84 Introduction to special issue on science, policy and social inequity
by Jameson M Wetmore - 85-94 Distributive justice in science and technology policy
by Susan E Cozzens - 95-107 How much justice can technology afford? The impact of DNA technology on equal criminal justice
by Simon A Cole - 109-116 Equity in forecasting climate: Can science save the world's poor?
by Maria Carmen Lemos & Lisa Dilling - 117-126 Governing human subjects research in the USA: Individualized ethics and structural inequalities
by Jill A Fisher - 127-138 Popular technology: Exploring inequality in the information economy
by Virginia Eubanks - 139-150 Science policies for reducing societal inequities
by Edward Woodhouse & Daniel Sarewitz - 151-152 Small entity patenting
by Katrin Cremers - 152-153 Exploring masculinity construction through reproduction
by David Navratil
February 2007, Volume 34, Issue 1
- 3-14 Changing boundaries: The role of policy networks in the multi-level governance of science and innovation in Scotland
by Catherine Lyall - 15-22 Is academic judgment sound? Evidence from technological agenda settings by experts
by Patrick Rondé & Caroline Hussler - 23-34 Assessing recent developments in innovation measurement: The third edition of the Oslo Manual
by Carter Bloch - 35-44 The governance of innovation in socio-technical systems: The difficulties of strategic niche management in practice
by Heather Lovell - 45-53 Understanding immigration in a national systems of innovation framework
by David M Hart - 55-69 Changing regimes of science and politics: Comparative and transnational perspectives for a world in transition
by Daniel Barben - 70-73 Transatlantic conflict over agro-food biotechnology
by Klaus Menrad - 74-75 Who invents biomedicine: Scientists, industry, or literature?
by Michael Filas - 75-76 Asking large questions about technology
by Brad McCormick - 77-78 Part Dilbert, Part Dale Carnegie—one for fun
by David Bruggeman
December 2006, Volume 33, Issue 10
- 702-712 The top eight percent: Development of approved and rejected applicants for a prestigious grant in Sweden
by Göran Melin & Rickard Danell - 713-728 Upping the ante: A conceptual framework for designing and evaluating participatory technology assessments
by Jacquelin Burgess & Jason Chilvers - 729-744 Separated at birth? Consensus and contention in the UK agriculture and human biotechnology commissions
by Mavis Jones & John Walls & Tom Horlick-Jones - 745-756 Which policy for innovation in services?
by Luis Rubalcaba - 757-769 Innovation systems in the European periphery: The policy approaches of Ireland and Greece
by Patrick Collins & Dimitrios Pontikakis - 770-771 A lively read
by Cooper H Langford - 771-773 A new policy paradigm, yes — but a working one?
by Sebastian Deterding
November 2006, Volume 33, Issue 9
- 627-646 Science and technology in global cooperation: The case of the United Nations and UNESCO
by Klaus-Heinrich Standke - 647-651 Science and technology advice within the United Nations: Some lessons from past experience
by Geoffrey Oldham - 653-668 Innovation in the European service industries
by Rinaldo Evangelista - 669-680 The problem of integrated innovation policy: Analyzing the governing role of the Science and Technology Policy Council of Finland
by Antti Pelkonen - 681-693 A European history of the Internet
by Jamal Shahin - 694-695 Community of learning, practice and collaboration
by Juan D Rogers - 695-696 Biography of the electron
by Grant Otsuki - 697-700 A unique source of information on collaboration
by László Csonka
October 2006, Volume 33, Issue 8
- 546-560 Approaches to research and development performance assessment in the United States: An analysis of recent evaluation trends
by Evan S Michelson - 561-570 Concerned scientists, pragmatic politics and Australia's green drought
by Sarah Bell - 571-584 Operationalising the public in participatory technology assessment: A framework for comparison applied to three cases
by Janus Hansen - 585-600 ‘Genetic exceptionalism’ and precautionary politics: Regulating for uncertainty in Britain's genetics and insurance policy process
by James Mittra - 601-612 Science crime. The Korean cloning scandal and the role of ethics
by Alexander Bogner & Wolfgang Menz - 613-617 The science and politics of Leo Szilard, 1898–1964: Evolution, revolution, or subversion?
by William Lanouette - 619-620 Engaging and provocative
by Jesse F Ballenger - 620-621 Fairer and faster publishing
by Danny Kingsley - 622-623 Why is the sky blue?
by Mark C Russell - 623-624 Reflections on the construction of knowledge
by David Bruggeman
August 2006, Volume 33, Issue 7
- 478-488 Participatory science governance revisited: Normative expectations versus empirical evidence
by Alfons Bora & Heiko Hausendorf - 489-504 The art of getting funded: How scientists adapt to their funding conditions
by Grit Laudel - 505-518 An examination of recent developments in Hong Kong's innovation system: 1990 to the present
by Naubahar Sharif - 519-528 When supply meets demand, yet no market emerges: The contribution of integrated environmental assessment to the rationalisation of EU environmental policy-making
by Anita Engels & Matthijs Hisschemöller & Konrad von Moltke - 529-540 Developing Iran's government strategies for strengthening the national system of innovation using SWOT analysis
by Sepehr Ghazinoory & Soroush Ghazinoori - 541-543 European competitive advantage: Quality products and innovation
by Theo Papaioannou - 543-544 Mobiles in Japan
by Lynne Hamill
July 2006, Volume 33, Issue 6
- 394-398 Practices of transdisciplinary research: close(r) encounters of science and society
by Sabine Maasen & Martin Lengwiler & Michael Guggenheim - 399-410 Transdisciplinarity: a new mode of governing science?
by Sabine Maasen & Olivier Lieven - 411-421 Undisciplined research: the proceduralisation of quality control in transdisciplinary projects
by Michael Guggenheim - 423-434 Between charisma and heuristics: four styles of interdisciplinarity
by Martin Lengwiler - 435-444 How to serve the customer and still be truthful: methodological characteristics of applied research
by Matthias Adam & Martin Carrier & Torsten Wilholt - 445-455 Transdisciplinarity viewed from afar: science-policy assessments as forums for the creation of transdisciplinary knowledge
by Michael Pregernig - 457-467 The programming of interdisciplinary research through informal science-policy interactions
by Chunglin Kwa - 469-472 Review essay
by Willem Halffman - 473-474 A popularization of science studies
by Cooper H Langford - 474-475 Book reviews
by Adam Holbrook
June 2006, Volume 33, Issue 5
- 310-320 The new visible hand: An assisted linear model of science and innovation policy
by Henry Etzkowitz - 321-340 Myths or reality - a scrutiny of dominant beliefs in the Swedish science policy debate
by Anders Granberg & Staffan Jacobsson - 341-350 Expert knowledge, Mode-2 and scientific disciplines: Two contrasting views
by Johannes Lenhard & Holger Lücking & Holger Schwechheimer - 351-363 Research and innovation in Bulgaria
by Kostadinka Simeonova - 365-376 Energy policy and institutional context: Marine energy innovation systems
by Mark Winskel & Andrew McLeod & Robin Wallace & Robin Williams - 377-389 An analysis of efforts to improve genetically modified food regulation in Canada
by Peter Andrée - 391-392 Communicating about sustainability
by Evelyn Brister
May 2006, Volume 33, Issue 4
- 239-252 Understanding the dynamics of networks of excellence
by Terttu Luukkonen & Maria Nedeva & Rémi Barré - 253-263 Scientists' coping strategies in an evolving research system: the case of life scientists in the UK
by Norma Morris & Arie Rip - 265-275 Local and global dynamics in technological development: a socio-cognitive perspective on knowledge flows and lessons from reinforced concrete
by Frank Geels & J Jasper Deuten - 277-290 Setting the agenda for science and technology in the public sector: the case of international agricultural research
by Dana G Dalrymple - 291-304 Stakeholder participation in health research agenda setting: the case of asthma and COPD research in the Netherlands
by J Francisca Caron-Flinterman & Jacqueline E W Broerse & Julia Teerling & Melissa L Y van Alst & Simon Klaasen & L Edwin Swart & Joske F G Bunders