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Chapter
Open Access
2 Open access
The beast that no-one could – or should – control?
Chapters in this book
- Front matter i
- Contents v
- List of figures and tables viii
- List of contributors ix
- Introduction 1
- Coda 12
-
Coda: reflections on the politics of openness in a new world order
- 1 Transparency 23
- 2 Open access 33
- 3 Assuaging fears of monstrousness 55
- 4 What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? 75
-
What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? Locating the monsters in the machine: an investigation of faith-based claims
- 5 Responsibility 97
- 6 Leviathan and the hybrid network 107
- 7 ‘Opening up’ energy transitions research for development 131
- 8 Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc. 148
-
Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc.: competing imaginaries of science and social order in responsible (research and) innovation
- 9 Expertise 169
- 10 Disentangling risk assessment 176
- 11 Monstrous materialities 195
- 12 An Inconvenient Truth 212
- 13 ‘Science Matters’ and the public interest 230
-
‘Science Matters’ and the public interest: the role of minority engagement
- 14 Faith 253
- 15 Re-examining ‘creationist’ monsters in the uncharted waters of social studies of science and religion 259
- 16 Playing God 278
- Afterword 303
- Epilogue 322
- Index 333
Chapters in this book
- Front matter i
- Contents v
- List of figures and tables viii
- List of contributors ix
- Introduction 1
- Coda 12
-
Coda: reflections on the politics of openness in a new world order
- 1 Transparency 23
- 2 Open access 33
- 3 Assuaging fears of monstrousness 55
- 4 What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? 75
-
What counts as evidence in adjudicating asylum claims? Locating the monsters in the machine: an investigation of faith-based claims
- 5 Responsibility 97
- 6 Leviathan and the hybrid network 107
- 7 ‘Opening up’ energy transitions research for development 131
- 8 Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc. 148
-
Monstrous regiment versus Monsters Inc.: competing imaginaries of science and social order in responsible (research and) innovation
- 9 Expertise 169
- 10 Disentangling risk assessment 176
- 11 Monstrous materialities 195
- 12 An Inconvenient Truth 212
- 13 ‘Science Matters’ and the public interest 230
-
‘Science Matters’ and the public interest: the role of minority engagement
- 14 Faith 253
- 15 Re-examining ‘creationist’ monsters in the uncharted waters of social studies of science and religion 259
- 16 Playing God 278
- Afterword 303
- Epilogue 322
- Index 333