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The Resource The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science, editors, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls, (electronic resource)

The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science, editors, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls, (electronic resource)

Label
The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science
Title
The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science
Statement of responsibility
editors, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls
Creator
Contributor
Editor
Subject
Language
eng
Summary
"The political economy of research and innovation (R&I) is one of the central issues of the early twenty-first century. 'Science' and 'innovation' are increasingly tasked with driving and reshaping a troubled global economy while also tackling multiple, overlapping global challenges, such as climate change or food security, global pandemics or energy security. But responding to these demands is made more complicated because R&I themselves are changing. Today, new global patterns of R&I are transforming the very structures, institutions and processes of science and innovation, and with it their claims about desirable futures. Our understanding of R&I needs to change accordingly.Responding to this new urgency and uncertainty, this handbook presents a pioneering selection of the growing body of literature that has emerged in recent years at the intersection of science and technology studies and political economy. The central task for this research has been to expose important but consequential misconceptions about the political economy of R&I and to build more insightful approaches. This volume therefore explores the complex interrelations between R&I (both in general and in specific fields) and political economies across a number of key dimensions from health to environment, and universities to the military.The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science offers a unique collection of texts across a range of issues in this burgeoning and important field from a global selection of top scholars. The handbook is essential reading for students interested in the political economy of science, technology and innovation. It also presents succinct and insightful summaries of the state of the art for more advanced scholars."--Provided by publisher.--
Assigning source
Provided by publisher
http://library.link/vocab/creatorName
Tyfield, David
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary form
non fiction
http://library.link/vocab/relatedWorkOrContributorName
  • Lave, Rebecca
  • Randalls, Samuel
  • Thorpe, Charles
Series statement
  • Routledge International Handbooks
  • Taylor & Francis eBooks
  • Taylor & Francis eBooks - Handbooks
http://library.link/vocab/subjectName
  • Science
  • Technological innovations
  • Technology and civilization
Label
The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science, editors, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls, (electronic resource)
Link
https://eui.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781315685397
Instantiates
Publication
Carrier category
online resource
Carrier MARC source
rdacarrier
Content category
text
Content type MARC source
rdacontent
Contents
  • Edward Nik-Khah
  • chapter 3 The Political Economy of the Manhattan Project
  • Charles Thorpe
  • chapter 4 The Knowledge Economy, the Crash and the Depression
  • Ugo Pagano Maria Alessandra Rossi
  • chapter 5 Science and Engineering in Digital Capitalism
  • Dan Schiller ShinJoung Yeo
  • chapter 6 US Pharma's Business Model
  • Why it is broken, and how it can be fixed
  • William Lazonick Matt Hopkins Ken Jacobson Mustafa Erdem Sakinç Öner Tulum
  • part, I From the ‘economics of science’ to the ‘political economy of research and innovation’
  • chapter 7 Research & Innovation (And) After Neoliberalism
  • The case of Chinese smart e-mobility
  • David Tyfield
  • part, II Institutions of science and science funding
  • chapter 8 Controlled Flows of Pharmaceutical Knowledge
  • Sergio Sismondo
  • chapter 9 Open Access Panacea
  • Scarcity, abundance, and enclosure in the new economy of academic knowledge production 1
  • Chris Muellerleile
  • chapter 10 The Political Economy of Higher Education and Student Debt
  • chapter Introduction
  • Eric Best Daniel Rich
  • chapter 11 Changes in Chinese Higher Education in the Era of Globalization
  • Honggang Xu Tian Ye
  • chapter 12 Financing Technoscience
  • Finance, assetization and rentiership
  • Kean Birch
  • chapter 13 The Ethical Government of Science and Innovation
  • Luigi Pellizzoni
  • chapter 14 The Political Economy of Military Science
  • Chris Langley Stuart Parkinson
  • Beyond crisis in the knowledge economy
  • part, III Fields of science
  • chapter 15 Genetically Engineered Food for a Hungry World
  • A changing political economy
  • Rebecca Harrison Abby Kinchy Laura Rabinow
  • chapter 16 Biodiversity Offsetting
  • Rebecca Lave Morgan Robertson
  • chapter 17 Distributed Biotechnology
  • Alessandro Delfanti
  • chapter 18 Translational Medicine
  • Science, risk and an emergent political economy of biomedical innovation
  • David Tyfield Rebecca Lave Samuel Randalls Charles Thorpe
  • Mark Robinson
  • chapter 19 Are Climate Models Global Public Goods?
  • Leigh Johnson Costanza Rampini
  • chapter 20 Renewable Energy Research and Development
  • A political economy perspective
  • David J. Hess Rachel G. McKane
  • chapter 21 Synthetic Biology
  • A political economy of molecular futures
  • Jairus Rossi
  • part, IV Governing science and governing through science
  • chapter 1 The Political Economy of Science
  • chapter 22 Toward a Political Economy of Neoliberal Climate Science
  • Larry Lohmann
  • chapter 23 Commercializing Environmental Data
  • Samuel Randalls
  • chapter 24 Science and Standards
  • Elizabeth Ransom Maki Hatanaka Jason Konefal Allison Loconto
  • chapter 25 Agnotology and the New Politicization of Science and Scientization of Politics
  • Manuela Fernández Pinto
  • chapter 26 Reconstructing or Reproducing?
  • Scientific authority and models of change in two traditions of citizen science
  • Prospects and retrospects
  • Gwen Ottinger
  • part, V (Political economic) geographies of science
  • chapter 27 The Transformation of Chinese Science
  • Richard P. Suttmeier
  • chapter 28 Postcolonial Technoscience and Development Aid
  • Insights from the political economy of locust control expertise
  • Claude Péloquin
  • chapter 29 World-System Analysis 2.0
  • Globalized science in centers and peripheries
  • Pierre Delvenne Pablo Kreimer
  • David Edgerton
  • chapter 30 From Science as “Development Assistance” to “Global Philanthropy”
  • Hebe Vessuri
  • chapter 31 Traveling Imaginaries
  • The “practice turn” in innovation policy and the global circulation of innovation models
  • Sebastian Pfotenhauer Sheila Jasanoff
  • chapter 32 What Is Science Critique? Lessig, Latour
  • Philip Mirowski
  • chapter 2 The “Marketplace of Ideas” and the Centrality of Science to Neoliberalism
Control code
9781315685397
Dimensions
unknown
Edition
First edition.
Extent
1 online resource
Isbn
9781317412014
Media category
computer
Media MARC source
rdamedia
Other control number
10.4324/9781315685397
Specific material designation
remote
System control number
(OCoLC)986102551
Label
The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of Science, editors, Rebecca Lave, Samuel Randalls, (electronic resource)
Link
https://eui.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/9781315685397
Publication
Carrier category
online resource
Carrier MARC source
rdacarrier
Content category
text
Content type MARC source
rdacontent
Contents
  • Edward Nik-Khah
  • chapter 3 The Political Economy of the Manhattan Project
  • Charles Thorpe
  • chapter 4 The Knowledge Economy, the Crash and the Depression
  • Ugo Pagano Maria Alessandra Rossi
  • chapter 5 Science and Engineering in Digital Capitalism
  • Dan Schiller ShinJoung Yeo
  • chapter 6 US Pharma's Business Model
  • Why it is broken, and how it can be fixed
  • William Lazonick Matt Hopkins Ken Jacobson Mustafa Erdem Sakinç Öner Tulum
  • part, I From the ‘economics of science’ to the ‘political economy of research and innovation’
  • chapter 7 Research & Innovation (And) After Neoliberalism
  • The case of Chinese smart e-mobility
  • David Tyfield
  • part, II Institutions of science and science funding
  • chapter 8 Controlled Flows of Pharmaceutical Knowledge
  • Sergio Sismondo
  • chapter 9 Open Access Panacea
  • Scarcity, abundance, and enclosure in the new economy of academic knowledge production 1
  • Chris Muellerleile
  • chapter 10 The Political Economy of Higher Education and Student Debt
  • chapter Introduction
  • Eric Best Daniel Rich
  • chapter 11 Changes in Chinese Higher Education in the Era of Globalization
  • Honggang Xu Tian Ye
  • chapter 12 Financing Technoscience
  • Finance, assetization and rentiership
  • Kean Birch
  • chapter 13 The Ethical Government of Science and Innovation
  • Luigi Pellizzoni
  • chapter 14 The Political Economy of Military Science
  • Chris Langley Stuart Parkinson
  • Beyond crisis in the knowledge economy
  • part, III Fields of science
  • chapter 15 Genetically Engineered Food for a Hungry World
  • A changing political economy
  • Rebecca Harrison Abby Kinchy Laura Rabinow
  • chapter 16 Biodiversity Offsetting
  • Rebecca Lave Morgan Robertson
  • chapter 17 Distributed Biotechnology
  • Alessandro Delfanti
  • chapter 18 Translational Medicine
  • Science, risk and an emergent political economy of biomedical innovation
  • David Tyfield Rebecca Lave Samuel Randalls Charles Thorpe
  • Mark Robinson
  • chapter 19 Are Climate Models Global Public Goods?
  • Leigh Johnson Costanza Rampini
  • chapter 20 Renewable Energy Research and Development
  • A political economy perspective
  • David J. Hess Rachel G. McKane
  • chapter 21 Synthetic Biology
  • A political economy of molecular futures
  • Jairus Rossi
  • part, IV Governing science and governing through science
  • chapter 1 The Political Economy of Science
  • chapter 22 Toward a Political Economy of Neoliberal Climate Science
  • Larry Lohmann
  • chapter 23 Commercializing Environmental Data
  • Samuel Randalls
  • chapter 24 Science and Standards
  • Elizabeth Ransom Maki Hatanaka Jason Konefal Allison Loconto
  • chapter 25 Agnotology and the New Politicization of Science and Scientization of Politics
  • Manuela Fernández Pinto
  • chapter 26 Reconstructing or Reproducing?
  • Scientific authority and models of change in two traditions of citizen science
  • Prospects and retrospects
  • Gwen Ottinger
  • part, V (Political economic) geographies of science
  • chapter 27 The Transformation of Chinese Science
  • Richard P. Suttmeier
  • chapter 28 Postcolonial Technoscience and Development Aid
  • Insights from the political economy of locust control expertise
  • Claude Péloquin
  • chapter 29 World-System Analysis 2.0
  • Globalized science in centers and peripheries
  • Pierre Delvenne Pablo Kreimer
  • David Edgerton
  • chapter 30 From Science as “Development Assistance” to “Global Philanthropy”
  • Hebe Vessuri
  • chapter 31 Traveling Imaginaries
  • The “practice turn” in innovation policy and the global circulation of innovation models
  • Sebastian Pfotenhauer Sheila Jasanoff
  • chapter 32 What Is Science Critique? Lessig, Latour
  • Philip Mirowski
  • chapter 2 The “Marketplace of Ideas” and the Centrality of Science to Neoliberalism
Control code
9781315685397
Dimensions
unknown
Edition
First edition.
Extent
1 online resource
Isbn
9781317412014
Media category
computer
Media MARC source
rdamedia
Other control number
10.4324/9781315685397
Specific material designation
remote
System control number
(OCoLC)986102551

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