Regulation of property, practices, and products

書誌事項

Regulation of property, practices, and products

edited by Susan S. Silbey

(The international library of essays in law and society, . Law and science ; v. 2)

Ashgate, c2008

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The conditions of contemporary life have been shaped in large part by science and technology extending human life, shrinking the globe, traveling into space. To effect human life and nature, for good or ill, enhancing safety or risk, science must be transformed by legal procedures from hypotheses and laboratory experiments into property and products. Both the legal processes and scientific practices derive legitimacy from being publicly observable and rational. Through their defining methods, both law and science attempt to constrain the use of unregulated force. Yet, despite their purportedly open and available processes, both science and legality are experienced as arcane, impenetrable, and often uninterpretable. Neither law nor science achieves the transparency to which it aspires. These two volumes collect exemplary law and society scholarship to look beneath the surface connections and antagonisms between these two powerful modern institutions. The first volume collects together articles on science as it enters legal domains, primarily as evidence and legitimation for political authority and the second explores how law acts within the domains of science, primarily as resources and regulations channeling both the practices of scientists and the consequences of scientific production.

目次

Volume I: Epistemological, Evidentiary and Relational Engagements Introduction Part 1: Epistemological Engagements 1. Howard Schweber (1999), 'Law and the Natural Sciences in Nineteenth-Century American Universities', Science in Context, 12, pp. 101 21. 3 2. Hanina Ben-Menahem and Yemima Ben-Menahem (1999), 'Law and Science - Reflections', Science in Context, 12, pp. 227 43. 25 3. Bruno Latour (2004), 'Scientific Objects and Legal Objectivity', trans. Alain Pottage in Alain Pottage and Martha Mondy (eds), Law, Anthropology and the Constitution of the Social: Making Persons and Things, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 73 114. 43 Part 2: Science in Court 4. Laurens Walker and John Monahan (1987), 'Social Frameworks: A New Use of Social Science in Law', Virginia Law Review, 73, pp. 559 98. 87 5. Jessica Riskin (1999), 'The Lawyer and the Lightning Rod', Science in Context, 12, pp. 61 99. 127 6. Tal Golan (1999), 'The History of Scientific Expert Testimony in the English Courtroom', Science in Context, 12, pp. 7 32. 167 7. Julie Johnson-McGrath (1995), 'Speaking for the Dead: Forensic Pathologists and Criminal Justice in the United States', Science, Technology, and Human Values, 20, pp. 438 59. 193 8. Jennifer L. Mnookin (1998), 'The Image of Truth: Photographic Evidence and the Power of Analogy', Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, 10, pp. 1 74. 215 9. Simon Cole (1999), 'What Counts for Identity? The Historical Origins of the Methodology of Latent Fingerprint Identification', Science in Context, 12, pp. 139 72. 289 10. Nicole Rafter (2001), 'Seeing and Believing: Images of Heredity in Biological Theories of Crime', Brooklyn Law Review, 67, pp. 71 99. 323 11. Michael Lynch and Ruth McNally (1999), 'Science, Common Sense and the Common Law: Courtroom Inquiries and the Public Understanding of Science', Social Epistemology, 13, pp. 183 96. 3 12. Arthur Daemmrich (1998), 'The Evidence Does Not Speak for Itself: Expert Witnesses and the Organization of DNA-Typing Companies', Social Studies of Science, 28 (Special Issue on Contested Identities: Science, Law and Forensic Practice), pp. 741 72. 367 13. Joseph Dumit (1999), 'Objective Brains, Prejudicial Images', Science in Context, 12, pp. 173 201. 399 14. Gary Edmond (2000), 'Judicial Representations of Scientific Evidence', Modern Law Review, 63, pp. 216 51. 429 PART 3: Doctrinal Struggles with Scientifically Generated Social Relations 15. Mathieu Deflem (1998), 'The Boundaries of Abortion Law: Systems Theory from Parsons to Luhmann and Habermas', Social Forces, 76, pp. 775 818. 467 16. Julian Dibbell (1993), 'A Rape in Cyberspace: How an Evil Clown, a Haitian Trickster Spirit, Two Wizards, and a Cast of Dozens Turned a Database into a Society', Village Voice, 38, pp. 1 14. Volume II: Regulation of Property, Practices, and Products Introduction Part 1: State Institutionalization of Science 1. Larry Owens (1990), 'MIT and the Federal "Angel": Academic R & D and the Federal-Private Cooperation before World War II', Isis, 81, pp. 188 213. 3 2. Daniel Lee Kleinman (1994), 'Layers of Interest, Layers of Influence: Business and the Genesis of the National Science Foundation', Science, Technology, and Human Values, 19, pp. 259 82. 29 3. Kelly Moore (1996), 'Organizing Integrity: American Science and the Creation of Public Interest Organizations, 1955 1975', American Journal of Sociology, 101, pp. 1592 627. 53 4. David H. Guston (1999), 'Stabilizing the Boundary between US Politics and Science: The Role of the Office of Technology Transfer as a Boundary Organization', Social Studies of Science, 29, pp. 87 111. 89 Part 2: Making Markets of/in Science 5. James R. Voelkel (1999), 'Publish or Perish: Legal Contingencies and the Publication of Kepler's Astronomia nova', Science in Context, 12, pp. 33 59. 117 6. Sally Smith Hughes (2001), 'Making Dollars out of DNA: The First Major Patent in Biotechnology and the Commercialization of Molecular Biology, 1974-1980', Isis, 92, pp. 541 75. 145 7. Hannah Landecker (1999), 'Between Beneficence and Chattel: The Human Biological in Law and Science', Science in Context, 12, pp. 203 25. 181 8. Jason Owen-Smith (2005), 'Dockets, Deals, and Sagas: Commensuration and the Rationalization of Experience in University Licensing', Social Studies of Science, 35, pp. 69 97. 205 Part 3: Governing Science: Law in the Lab 9. Barrie Thorne (1980), '"You Still Takin' Notes?" Fieldwork and Problems of Informed Consent', Social Problems, 27, pp. 284 97. 10. Philip L. Bereano (1984), 'Institutional Biosafety Committees and the Inadequacies of Risk Regulation', Science, Technology, and Human Values, 9, pp. 16 34. 251 11. Susan S. Silbey and Patricia Ewick (2003), 'The Architecture of Authority: The Place of Law in the Space of Science', in Austin Sarat, Lawrence Douglas and Martha Umphrey (eds), The Place of Law, Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, pp. 75 108. 271 12. Cyrus C.M. Mody (2001), 'A Little Dirt Never Hurt Anyone: Knowledge-Making and Contamination in Materials Science', Social Studies of Science, 31, pp. 7 36. 305 13. Benjamin Sims (2005), 'Safe Science: Material and Social Order in Laboratory Work', Social Studies of Science, 35, pp. 333 66. 335 Part 4: Governing Scientists: Social Control and Scientific Misconduct 14. Nachman Ben-Yehuda (1986), 'Deviance in Science: Towards the Criminology of Science', British Journal of Criminology, 26, pp. 1 27. 371 15. Edward J. Hackett (1994), 'A Social Control Perspective on Scientific Misconduct', Journal of Higher Education, 65, pp. 242 60. 399 16. Marcel C. LaFollette (1994), 'The Politics of Research Misconduct: Congressional Oversight, Universities, and Science', Journal of Higher Education, 65, pp. 261 85. 419 Part 5: Governing the Products of Science 17 Sheila S. Jasanoff (1987), 'Contested Boundaries in Policy-Relevant Science', Social Studies of Science, 17, pp. 195 230. 447 18. Les Levidow (2001), 'Precautionary Uncertainty: Regulating GM Crops in Europe', Social Studies of Science, 31, pp. 842 74. 483 19. Hugh Gusterson (2000), 'How Not to Construct a Radioactive Waste Incinerator', Science, Technology, and Human Values, 25, pp. 332 51.

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詳細情報

  • NII書誌ID(NCID)
    BA86584237
  • ISBN
    • 9780754625001
  • 出版国コード
    uk
  • タイトル言語コード
    eng
  • 本文言語コード
    eng
  • 出版地
    Aldershot, Hampshire, England
  • ページ数/冊数
    xxv, 544 p.
  • 大きさ
    25 cm
  • 親書誌ID
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