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tag politics policy global warming science publishing

Science, policy, and partisan politics
Ted Agres(tedagres@lycos.com) | Aug 12, 2003 | 4 min read
Congressional report fuels debate over science and decision making
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Science Under Maximum Pressure in Iran
David Adam | Sep 13, 2019 | 5 min read
From travel restrictions and publishing bans to currency collapse, the restoration of US sanctions has left researchers in Iran reeling.
Global Warming
Fred Singer | May 10, 1998 | 2 min read
I cannot agree that, "Science's pivotal role is to...convince both Congress and the public to reduce CO2 emissions. . . ." (P. Smaglik, The Scientist, 12[1]:1, Jan. 5, 1998). The role of science should be to research the global warming problem and lay out all of the relevant facts. The article fails to mention: That the warming of the past 100 years occurred before 1940, well before the bulk of the greenhouse gases had been emitted; That it was followed by a cooling in both hemispheres lasti
Opinion: Science, Meet Politics
Miriam R. Fein | Aug 23, 2017 | 5 min read
The events of the past six months have inspired advocacy for the first time.
Global Warming Debate Centers On Uncertainty
Paul Smaglik | Jan 4, 1998 | 8 min read
The Kyoto Accord to reduce "greenhouse" gas emissions faces a hazy future in the United States. A host of unresolved political and scientific issues swirls around the tentative plan to curb global warming-including the degree to which greenhouse gases actually affect the environment. Kyoto sets the stage for science, politics, and public opinion to interact on the largest possible scale, and, some would say, at the highest possible stakes. Science's pivotal role is to take on a formidable chall
China Catches Up with the US in Science and Tech
Catherine Offord | Jan 17, 2020 | 2 min read
A new report from the National Science Board identifies changes in the US’s global R&D investment and output, as well as in the country’s science and engineering workforce in recent years.
Speaking of Science 2015
Bob Grant | Dec 30, 2015 | 3 min read
A year’s worth of noteworthy quotes
Australia Loses Science Minister
Kerry Grens | Sep 18, 2013 | 2 min read
For the first time since 1931, the incoming Prime Minister of Australia did not appoint a science chief.
The Future of U.S. Science Policy
Robert E. Pacifici and David P. Rankin | Sep 1, 2008 | 3 min read
The Future of U.S. Science Policy Illustrations by Jordan Domont With an administration change at hand, research could come out of the shadows and into the political light. By Bob Grant Article Extras Ken Thorpe Egils Milbergs John Porter Lana Skirboll 2008 Election Coverage Vote for the next president Which biologist would you elect president? Science and Politics Careers: The Scientist as Politician In late 2001, the George W. Bush
preprint academic publishing science research covid-19 coronavirus pandemic reproducibility
Opinion: The Rise of Preprints Is No Cause for Alarm
Jonny Coates | Apr 14, 2021 | 4 min read
At a time of fast-paced science and rampant misinformation, can we trust the non–peer-reviewed literature?

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