Handbook on Science and Public Policy
Edited by Dagmar Simon, Stefan Kuhlmann, Julia Stamm and Weert Canzler; Handbooks of Research on Public Policy series, Edward Elgar Publishing, June 2019, ISBN: 9781784715939.
About the Book: This Handbook assembles state-of-the-art insights into the co-evolutionary and precarious relations between science and public policy. Beyond this, it also offers a fresh outlook on emerging challenges for science (including technology and innovation) in changing societies, and related policy requirements, as well as the challenges for public policy in view of science-driven economic, societal, and cultural changes. In short, this book deals with science as a policy-triggered project as well as public policy as a science-driven venture.
Table of Contents
Part I Changing Contract Between Science, Society, and Public PolicyIntroduction: Science and public policy – relations in flux | Dagmar Simon, Stefan Kuhlmann, Julia Stamm and Weert Canzler
Part II Changing National/Global Science and Policy Landscape1 Next generation science policy and Grand Challenges | Stefan Kuhlmann and Arie Rip
2 Responsible Innovation and Responsible Research and Innovation | Richard Owen and Mario Pansera
3 Normative answers – epistemic questions. Updating the science–society contract | Sabine Maasen and Sascha Dickel
4 Re-making the modern constitution: the case for an observatory on public engagement practices | Jan-Peter Voß
Part III Changing Actors and Framings of Science and Public Policy5 Global science for global challenges | Caroline S. Wagner
6 The current state of the art of science diplomacy | Tim Flink and Nicolas Rüffin
7 Bringing the rules back in. Peer review, bureaucracy and the reform of science governance in France (1960–2010) | Jérôme Aust and Clémentine Gozlan
8 U.S. scientific collaboration on research and policy: the necessity of global engagement | Elizabeth A. Corley
9 Australian science policy: funding, focus and failings | Karen Hussey, Christopher McEwan and Julia Playford
Part IV Changing Production of Knowledge10 Innovation and the marginalization of research | Benoît Godin
11 Changing science policies, authority relationships and innovations in public science systems | Richard Whitley
12 Higher education developments and the effects on science | Jeroen Huisman and Marco Seeber
13 New forms of policy expertise | Holger Strassheim and Weert Canzler
14 Innovation, excellence and reputation: the persistence of the German science system | Andreas Knie and Dagmar Simon
15 Gender in European research policy | Liudvika Leišytė
Part V Changing Governance of Scientific Research and Related Public Policies16 Processing issues in science policy: emerging epistemic regimes | Stefan Böschen
17 Changing science–society relations in the digital age: the citizen science movement and its broader implications | Martina Franzen
18 Triple Helix: a universal innovation model? | Henry Etzkowitz and Alice Zhou
19 Interdisciplinarity put to test: science policy rhetoric vs scientific practice – the case of integrating the social sciences and humanities in Horizon 2020 | Julia Stamm
Part VI Changing Studies of Science Policy, Science, And Innovation20 Changes in European research and innovation governance: coordination effects and membership effects | Susana Borrás
21 How can governance change research content? Linking science policy studies to the sociology of science | Jochen Gläser
22 The changing governance of research systems. Agencification and organizational differentiation in research funding organizations | Benedetto Lepori and Emanuela Reale
23 Globalization and the rise of rankings | Paul Wouters
24 Assessing the broader impacts of publicly funded research | Claire Donovan
25 Why science and innovation policy needs Science and Technology Studies? | Robin Williams
26 The future of science policy and innovation studies: some challenges and the factors underlying them | Ben R. Martin
No comments:
Post a Comment