Content
May 2006, Volume 33, Issue 4
- 305-306 Unesco surveys the globalization of science and technology
by Jacques Richardson - 306-308 Encouraging do-it-yourself innovation
by David Bruggeman
April 2006, Volume 33, Issue 3
- 166-178 Segmenting academics: resource targeting of research grants
by Neil Viner & Rod Green & Philip Powell - 179-190 Regulatory experiments: genetically modified crops and financial derivatives on trial
by Yuval Millo & Javier Lezaun - 191-204 Managing expertise: performers, principals, and problems in Canadian nuclear waste management
by Darrin Durant - 205-216 Public research funding and research policy: a long-term analysis for the Swiss case
by Benedetto Lepori - 217-229 Mobility of foreign researchers in Norway
by Lars Nerdrum & Bo Sarpebakken - 231-232 A pre-hopeful way!
by Gordon Euchler - 232-235 Opposite opinions in one book
by Tilo Propp
March 2006, Volume 33, Issue 2
- 91-102 Benchmarking as a policy-making tool: From the private to the public sector
by Theodoros Papaioannou & Howard Rush & John Bessant - 103-113 Scientific independence as a constitutive part of parliamentary technology assessment
by Armin Grunwald - 115-123 Social sciences and science policies in Mexico
by Heriberta Castaños-Lomnitz - 125-136 The South African national system of innovation: From constructed crisis to constructed advantage?
by Michael Kahn - 137-150 The generative and developmental roles of universities in regional innovation systems
by Chrys Gunasekara - 151-160 Co-production, emergent properties and strong interactive social research: the Georgia Basin Futures Project
by John Robinson & James Tansey - 161-162 When the constitution goes to the laboratory
by Andrea Boggio - 162-163 Does genetic engineering pose a significant risk?
by K Ravi Srinivas
February 2006, Volume 33, Issue 1
- 3-4 The sealing of university intellectual property boundaries and the ceiling of academic entrepreneurial tolerance
by Michel Rod - 5-16 Contradictory intent? US federal legislation on integrating societal concerns into nanotechnology research and development
by Erik Fisher & Roop L Mahajan - 17-31 Information technology research in the UK: perspectives on services research and development, and systems of innovation
by Jeremy Howells & Bruce Tether & Deborah Cox & John Rigby - 33-46 ‘Science for survival’: biotechnology regulation in Israel
by Barbara Prainsack & Ofer Firestine - 47-57 Japanese technology policy for aged care
by Noriko Dethlefs & Brian Martin - 59-76 Research and development: how the ‘D’ got into R&D
by Benoît Godin - 77-83 Triple Helix twins: innovation and sustainability
by Henry Etzkowitz & Chunyan Zhou - 84-86 Canadian contribution to the cluster craze
by Amanda Williams - 86-88 Senior citizens and technology
by Simone Kimpeler
December 2005, Volume 32, Issue 6
- 418-422 Institutional perspectives on science-policy boundaries
by Sujatha Raman - 423-433 The US National Bioethics Advisory Commission as a boundary organization
by Mary Leinhos - 435-444 Scientists' conceptions of the boundaries between their own research and policy
by Claire Waterton - 445-456 Comparative boundary work: US acid rain and global climate change policy deliberations
by Stephen Zehr - 457-467 Science-policy boundaries: national styles?
by Willem Halffman - 469-478 National technology entrepreneurship policy: foundation of a network economy
by Thomas A Hemphill - 479-489 Citizen deliberations on science and technology and their social environments: case study on the Japanese consensus conference on GM crops
by Mariko Nishizawa - 490-493 Implementing transition management
by Klaus Rennings - 493-495 Hidden constraints on university research
by Jacqueline Senker - 495-496 Developing wireless emergency services: a constructivist approach
by Gano Gretchen - 497-498 Getting governance into genomics
by Elizabeth Dowdeswell & Abdallah S Daar & Peter A Singer
October 2005, Volume 32, Issue 5
- 335-338 On the evaluation of European Union research: The 2004 Five-Year Assessment
by Neville Reeve - 339-347 Changing economic landscape: Liberalisation and knowledge infrastructures
by Keith Smith - 349-366 Framework Programme 5 (FP5) impact assessment: A survey conducted as part of the five-year assessment of European Union research activities (1999–2003)
by Ken Guy & Effie Amanatidou & Foteini Psarra - 367-373 Trying to capture additionality in Framework Programme 5 — main findings
by Wolfgang Polt & Gerhard Streicher - 375-384 Implementation of European Research Policy
by Karen Siune & Evanthia Kalpazidou Schmidt & Kaare Aagaard - 385-397 What the evaluation record tells us about European Union Framework Programme performance
by Erik Arnold & John Clark & Alessandro Muscio - 399-406 Evaluating the European Union's Research Framework Programmes: 1999–2003
by Erkki Ormala & Nicholas S Vonortas - 407-408 Context of American university commerce
by David Bruggeman - 408-410 Public understanding of science
by Arie Rip - 410-413 Pattern of accidental discoveries in science
by Thomas Heinze - 414-415 Conversations across boundaries
by Cooper H Langford
August 2005, Volume 32, Issue 4
- 258-259 Precautionary expertise for European Union agbiotech regulation
by Les Levidow & Susan Carr - 261-276 European Union regulation of agri-biotechnology: precautionary links between science, expertise and policy
by Les Levidow & Susan Carr & David Wield - 277-284 Austria's agri-biotechnology regulation: political consensus despite divergent concepts of precaution
by Helge Torgersen & Alexander Bogner - 285-292 Germany's agri-biotechnology policy: precaution for choice and alternatives
by Karin Boschert & Bernhard Gill - 293-300 Denmark's regulation of agri-biotechnology: co-existence bypassing risk issues
by Jesper Toft - 301-308 How the French GM controversy led to the reciprocal emancipation of scientific expertise and policy making
by Christophe Bonneuil - 309-316 Regulating GM crops in the Netherlands: precaution as societal-ethical evaluation
by Piet Schenkelaars - 317-324 GM crops in the United Kingdom: precaution as process
by Sue Oreszczyn - 325-326 Transnational privacy standards, equity in practice
by Rachel Dowty - 326-327 Gambling with life: futures, insurance, and catastrophe
by Colin Beech - 328-329 Science and technology in transition
by Jutta Günther - 330-331 Holistic approach to innovation in Poland
by Kostadinka Simeonova - 331-332 Water, water, but not everywhere
by Jacques Richardson
June 2005, Volume 32, Issue 3
- 174-186 Science and democracy in a globalizing world: challenges for American foreign policy
by Clark A Miller - 187-198 A dilemma for developing countries in intellectual property strategy? Lessons from a case study of software piracy and Microsoft in China
by Xiaobai Shen - 199-209 Tensions in the research council-research community relationship
by Magnus Gulbrandsen - 211-218 Transport research in South Africa: a quantitative assessment
by Anastassios Pouris - 219-230 Identification of firms supported by technology policies: the case of Spanish low interest credits
by Joost Heijs - 231-2465 The same story or new directions? Science and technology within the framework of the African Union and New Partnership for Africa's Development
by Frank K Teng-Zeng - 247-250 Bodies in motion in the information age
by Sal Restivo - 251-252 Bottom-up approaches to international environmental policy
by Raimund Bleischwitz - 253-254 Careful systems analysis of ERA
by Susana Borrás - 254-255 ‘Evolutionary approach’ to human nature
by Paul Ekins
April 2005, Volume 32, Issue 2
- 95-108 S&T institutions in Latin America and the Caribbean: an overview
by Léa Velho - 109-118 The Innovation Systems Research Network: a Canadian experiment in knowledge management
by J Adam Holbrook & David A Wolfe - 119-136 Public values and public failure in US science policy
by Barry Bozeman & Daniel Sarewitz - 137-153 Agoras, ancient and modern, and a framework for science-society debate
by Sally Davenport & Shirley Leitch - 155-161 Testing the boundaries of public private partnership: the privatisation of the UK Defence Evaluation and Research Agency
by Andrew D James & Deborah Cox & John Rigby - 162-163 Shedding new light on a variegated universe
by Rinaldo Evangelista - 164-167 Transition to a knowledge-based economy
by Jean-Alain Héraud - 167-168 Exploration and the history of mathematics
by J L Berggren - 168-170 Science influenced by funding
by Rebecca Slayton - 170-171 Snapshots of an American research university
by David Bruggeman
February 2005, Volume 32, Issue 1
- 2-16 Science for climate change policy-making: applying theory to practice to enhance effectiveness
by Anne Arquit Niederberger - 17-27 Collective benchmarking of policies: an instrument for policy learning in adaptive research and innovation policy
by Marianne Paasi - 29-38 Distributional effects of science and technology-based economic development strategies at state level in the United States
by Susan E Cozzens & Kamau Bobb & Kendall Deas & Sonia Gatchair & Albert George & Gonzalo Ordonez - 39-53 Bringing science and technology human resources back in: the Spanish Ramón y Cajal programme
by Laura Cruz-Castro & Luis Sanz-Menéndez - 55-64 Controlling mobile phone health risks in the UK: a fragile discourse of compliance
by Jack Stilgoe - 65-77 Towards a knowledge-based economy: does the Cyprus R&D capability meet the challenge?
by Bernard Musyck & Athanasios Hadjimanolis - 79-87 Assessing the achievement of specific policy objectives: biotechnology in Greece
by Alexandros Bousios & Jacqueline Senker - 88-88 Balancing the books on social cohesion
by Michael D Mehta - 89-91 Snapshot of process of transformation
by Dietmar Braun - 91-92 Learning from past mistakes
by Elisabeth A Abergel
December 2004, Volume 31, Issue 6
- -491 Reply to the comments of Kostadinka Simeonova
by Elena Z Mirskaya - 422-424 Introduction to special issue on a European system of innovation
by Susana Borrás - 425-433 System of innovation theory and the European Union
by Susana Borrás - 435-447 Is there a European knowledge system?
by Josephine Anne Stein - 449-456 The patent system and the dynamics of innovation in Europe
by Dominique Foray - 457-464 Risk society and the governance of innovation in Europe: opening the black box?
by Maria Eduarda Gonçalves - 465-474 Innovation for European competitiveness and cohesion: Opportunities and difficulties of co-evolution
by Lena J Tsipouri - 475-483 Technology policy, European Union enlargement, and economic, social and political sustainability
by Nick von Tunzelmann & Sussan Nassehi - 485-489 Reflections on the systems of innovation approach
by Charles Edquist - 490-490 Comment on Mirskaya and Rabkin's article “Russian academic scientists in the first Post-Soviet decade”
by Kostadinka Simeonova - 492-493 How would you like your cluster?
by James G Wilkin - 493-496 Multinational, international, national?
by Magnus Gulbrandsen - 496-497 Small firms as innovators
by Birgit Ossenkopf - 497-498 Genetics, ethics and hubris
by Susan M Cox
October 2004, Volume 31, Issue 5
- 342-343 Introduction to special issue on innovation policies for biotechnology in Europe
by Paraskevas Caracostas & Marie-Christine Brichard - 344-358 Performance of European Member States in biotechnology
by Thomas Reiss & Sibylle Hinze & Iciar Dominguez Lacasa - 359-370 Biotechnology innovation systems in two small countries: A comparison of Portugal and Ireland
by Jane Calvert & Jacqueline Senker - 371-383 Commercialisation of biotechnology: Do dedicated public policies matter?
by Christien Enzing & Annelieke van der Giessen & Sander Kern - 385-395 Trends and gaps in biotechnology policies in European Member States since 1994
by Jacqueline Senker - 397-406 From sectoral to horizontal public policies: The evolution of support for biotechnology in Europe, 1994–2001
by Vincent Mangematin - 407-414 A game theory analysis of how research organisations adapt their behaviour in the New Zealand competitively funded science system
by Sean Devine & Colin Webb - 415-417 Mobile phones/masts and health risks
by Peter Georgieff - 417-419 Puzzle unfolding: complexity of interdisciplinary research
by Tom Koch
August 2004, Volume 31, Issue 4
- 254-266 A debate on innovation surveys
by Mónica Salazar & Adam Holbrook - 267-277 What is R&D? Why does it matter?
by Naushad Forbes & David Wield - 279-287 Closing the productivity gap between eastern and western Europe: The role of foreign direct investment
by David A Dyker - 289-299 Why is joint knowledge production such a problem?
by Arwin van Buuren & Jurian Edelenbos - 301-312 Industry response to the Spanish governmental Plan for the Promotion of R&D within the Pharmaceutical Industry (1986–1996)
by Isabel Pérez-Escolano & Gonzalo París - 313-327 Innovation systems as regional policy frameworks: The case of Lisbon and Tagus Valley
by Manuel Laranja - 328-330 Getting inside science and technology studies
by Naubahar Sharif - 331-340 Conflicting opinions
by Richard G Lipsey
June 2004, Volume 31, Issue 3
- 175-184 Japanese research grants for young researchers
by Yuko Ito - 185-197 Biosciences and the rise of regional science policy
by Philip Cooke - 199-211 Science shops in Europe: the public as stakeholder
by Corinna Fischer & Loet Leydesdorff & Malte Schophaus - 213-226 Searching for research integration across Europe: a closer look at international and inter-regional collaboration in France
by Yoshiko Okubo & Michel Zitt - 227-244 Combining different brands of in-house knowledge: technological capabilities in food, biotechnology, chemicals and drugs in agri-food multinationals
by Oscar Alfranca & Ruth Rama & Nicholas von Tunzelmann - 245-247 Blurred borders - distinct concepts
by Jakob Edler - 247-248 Work practices made visible, connections to history invisible
by Ana Viseu - 248-250 Battles for the mind, images at war
by Scott L Montgomery - 250-251 Part-timers in academia
by Tiago Santos Pereira - 251-252 Imposing worlds of contemporary biotechnology
by Chris Ganchoff
April 2004, Volume 31, Issue 2
- 90-94 Science and citizenship: a new synergy
by Sheila Jasanoff - 95-105 Environmental citizenship in the making: the participation of volunteer naturalists in UK biological recording and biodiversity policy
by Rebecca Ellis & Claire Waterton - 107-115 Global change science and the Arctic citizen
by Marybeth Long Martello - 117-126 Institutionalising non-governmental organisation dialogue at Unilever: framing the public as ‘consumer-citizens’
by Robert Doubleday - 127-138 Making seafood sustainable: merging consumption and citizenship in the United States
by Alastair Iles - 139-149 Managing potential selves: stem cells, immigrants, and German identity
by Stefan Sperling - 151-158 Innovation cooperation: experiences from East and West Germany
by Jutta Günther - 159-163 Examining the examined career: Diana Forsythe as ethnographer and participant in computing research
by Jo Ann Oravec - 165-166 Bioethics and regulation of human genetic engineering
by José López - 166-167 Fascinating but not an easy read
by Cooper H Langford - 167-169 Beyond the public: revising democracy as we know it
by Jane L. Lehr - 169-170 Missing the mark
by Tansey James - 170-171 An absolute ‘must’ for any science writer
by Taylor Iain
February 2004, Volume 31, Issue 1
- 2-14 Russian academic scientists in the first post-Soviet decade: Empirical study
by Elena Z Mirskaya & Yakov M Rabkin - 15-25 Inventive concentration in the production of green technology: A comparative analysis of fuel cell patents
by Catherine Liston-Heyes & Alan Pilkington - 27-37 Foresight in a multi-level governance structure: policy integration and communication
by Catherine Lyall & Joyce Tait - 39-54 Promise and perils of electronic public engagement
by Gene Rowe & John G Gammack - 55-67 Demand articulation, a key factor in the reconfiguration of the present Japanese science and technology system
by Shinichi Kobayashi & Yoshiko Okubo - 69-75 Review essay: Scientific enterprise in Islam
by Toby E Huff - 76-77 Genetics, policy and public education
by Kerry Kidd - 77-78 Finding out about public illness
by Jack Stilgoe - 78-80 Applying wisdom to explosive issues
by Lynsey Foster - 81-82 Democratizing science and environmental health policy
by Michael Skladany - 82-84 Seams in an institutional web
by Ragna Zeiss - 84-85 A must for policy makers
by Aviel Verbruggen - 85-86 Promises and drawbacks of a global IPR regime
by K Ravi Srinivas - 87-88 Thin lines between science and society
by Hans Keune
December 2003, Volume 30, Issue 6
- 391-404 A European Research Council: An idea whose time has come?
by David J v H Gronbaek - 405-414 The two faces of PhD students: Management of early careers of French PhDs in life sciences
by V Mangematin & S Robin - 415-429 Revising the definition of research and development in the light of the specificities of services
by Faridah Djellal & Dominique Francoz & Camal Gallouj & Faïz Gallouj & Yves Jacquin - 431-440 Has innovation policy an influence on innovation? The case of a country in transition
by Andrzej H Jasinski - 441-454 The problem of citizens' participation in Finnish biotechnology policy
by Mikko Rask - 455-459 A critique of Staffan Jacobsson's paper “Universities and industrial transformation”
by Thomas Andersson & Magnus Henrekson - 459-461 Response to the critique by Andersson and Henrekson
by Staffan Jacobsson - 463-464 A risky career
by Susanna Hornig Priest - 464-465 Regulating the future
by Katharine Wright - 465-466 Relations of equal regard: Science and the humanities
by Ulrich Teucher - 467-468 Questions of democracy
by Mary K Feeney - 468-469 Economics paradigm inadequate
by Cooper H Langford - 469-470 Supremacy of science
by Chai Choon Lee
October 2003, Volume 30, Issue 5
- 302-308 Principal-agent theory and research policy: An introduction
by Dietmar Braun & David H Guston - 309-321 Lasting tensions in research policy-making — a delegation problem
by Dietmar Braun - 323-336 New roles and strategies of a research council: Intermediation of the principal-agent relationship
by Barend van der Meulen - 337-346 Principals, agents and contracts
by Chris Caswill - 347-357 Principal-agent theory and the structure of science policy, revisited: ‘Science in policy’ and the US Report on Carcinogens
by David H Guston - 359-370 Academic researchers as ‘agents’ of science policy
by Norma Morris - 371-381 Principals, agents and research programmes
by Elizabeth Shove - 382-383 Understanding who we conceive ourselves to be
by Brad McCormick - 383-385 Community stewardship and inclusive decision-making
by Sharon McKenzie Stevens - 385-386 Future of genetic technologies
by Robert Frost - 386-388 Policy trends in information and communication technologies
by Esther Ruiz Ben - 388-388 Scientific ethos in a knowledge society
by Mentzel Maarten
August 2003, Volume 30, Issue 4
- 235-238 Boundary organisations in science: From discourse to construction
by Tomas Hellström & Merle Jacob - 239-250 The ‘user’ in research funding negotiation processes
by Sally Davenport & Shirley Leitch & Arie Rip - 251-260 The ‘discipline’ of post-academic science: reconstructing the paradigmatic foundations of a virtual research institute
by Tomas Hellström & Merle Jacob & Søren Barlebo Wenneberg - 261-272 The conceptual organization: An emergent organizational form for collaborative R&D
by Diane H Sonnenwald - 273-284 Multi-sector collaboration: A stakeholder perspective on a government, industry and university collaborative venture
by Michel R M Rod & Stanley J Paliwoda - 285-294 Role of competition policy in the US innovation system
by Thomas A Hemphill - 295-300 The varieties of experienced time
by Katharine Wright - 296-297 Reading genes, heavens, and computers
by Ulrich Teucher - 298-299 Shaping public policy and opinion
by Dawn House - 299-300 Collective memory
by Dianne Newell
June 2003, Volume 30, Issue 3
- 146-150 ‘Democratising’ expertise, ‘expertising’ democracy: What does this mean, and why bother?
by Angela Liberatore & Silvio Funtowicz - 151-156 Democratising expertise and socially robust knowledge
by Helga Nowotny - 157-162 (No?) Accounting for expertise
by Sheila Jasanoff - 163-170 Democracy in the age of assessment: Reflections on the roles of expertise and democracy in public-sector decision making
by Steve Rayner