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Manchester University Press

Chapter Open Access

2 Open access

The beast that no-one could – or should – control?
© 2018 Manchester University Press, Manchester

© 2018 Manchester University Press, Manchester

Chapters in this book

  1. Front matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of figures and tables viii
  4. List of contributors ix
  5. Introduction 1
  6. Coda 12
  7. Coda: reflections on the politics of openness in a new world order
  8. 1 Transparency 23
  9. 2 Open access 33
  10. 3 Assuaging fears of monstrousness 55
  11. 4 What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? 75
  12. What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? Locating the monsters in the machine: an investigation of faith-based claims
  13. 5 Responsibility 97
  14. 6 Leviathan and the hybrid network 107
  15. 7 ‘Opening up’ energy transitions research for development 131
  16. 8 Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc. 148
  17. Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc.: competing imaginaries of science and social order in responsible (research and) innovation
  18. 9 Expertise 169
  19. 10 Disentangling risk assessment 176
  20. 11 Monstrous materialities 195
  21. 12 An Inconvenient Truth 212
  22. 13 ‘Science Matters’ and the public interest 230
  23. ‘Science Matters’ and the public interest: the role of minority engagement
  24. 14 Faith 253
  25. 15 Re-examining ‘creationist’ monsters in the uncharted waters of social studies of science and religion 259
  26. 16 Playing God 278
  27. Afterword 303
  28. Epilogue 322
  29. Index 333
Science and the politics of openness
This chapter is in the book Science and the politics of openness
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