Table of Contents
PART I: Science, Technology, and the State1. Y. Ezrahi (1984), ‘Science and Utopia in Late 20th Century Pluralist Democracy: With a Special Reference to the U.S.A’2. J.G. Ruggie (1975), ‘International Responses to Technology: Concepts and Trends’3. E. Solingen (1993), ‘Between Markets and the State: Scientists in Comparative Perspective’4. A. Jamison (1987), ‘National Styles of Science and Technology: A Comparative Model’PART II: Governmental Support for Science5. H. Nowotny (1990), ‘Knowledge for Certainty: Poverty, Welfare Institutions and the Institutionalization of Social Science’6. A. Rip (1994), ‘The Republic of Science in the 1990’s’7. A. Elzinga and I. Bohlin (1989), ‘The Politics of Science in Polar Regions’ 8. Y. Gingras and M. Trépanier (1993), ‘Constructing a Tokamak: Political, Economic, and Technical Factors as Constraints and Resources’ PART III: Cross-National Perspectives on Technology Policy9. Henry Ergas (1987), ‘Does Technology Policy Matter?’10. R.R. Nelson (1990), ‘U.S. Technological Leadership: Where Did It Come From, and Where Did It Go?’11. M. Evangelista (1989), ‘Issue-Area and Foreign Policy Revisited’12. H. Willke (1995), ‘The Proactive State: The Role of National Enabling Policies in Global Socio-Economic Transformations’ PART IV: Cultures of Innovation13. P. Patel and K. Pavitt (1994), ‘National Innovation Systems: Why They Are Important, and How They Might Be Measured and Compared’14. H. Kitschelt (1991), ‘Industrial Governance Structures, Innovation Strategies and the Case of Japan: Sectoral or Cross-National Comparative Analysis?’15. J. Nicholas Ziegler (1995), ‘Institutions, Elites, and Technological Change in France and Germany’PART V: Regulatory Politics and Policy16. Sheila Jasanoff (1990), ‘American Exceptionalism and the Political Acknowledgement of Risk’17. J. Abraham and E. Millstone (1989), ‘Food Additive Controls: Some International Comparisons’18. D. Vogel (1992), ‘Consumer Protection and Protectionism in Japan’19. K. Harrison and G. Hoberg (1991), ‘Setting the Environmental Agenda in Canada and the United States: The Cases of Dioxin and Radon‘20. M.R. Reich (1995), ‘The Politics of Agenda Setting in International Health: Child Health versus Adult Health in Developing Countries’21. A.L. Bonnicksen (1994), ‘National and International Approaches to Human Germ-Line Gene Therapy’22. M.E. Porter and Claas van der Linde (1995), ‘Toward a New Conception of the Environment-Competitiveness Relationship’(22)PART VI: International Influences and National Policy23. P.M. Haas (1989), ‘Do Regimes Matter? Epistemic Communities and Mediterranean Pollution Control’24. M.A. Hajer (1995), ‘Politics on the Move: The Democratic Control of the Design of Sustainable Technologies’25. D. Laurence and B. Wynne (1989), ‘Transporting Waste in the European Community: A Free Market? ’26. A. Mol and J. Law (1994), ‘Regions, Networks and Fluids: Anaemia and Social Topology’27. J.N. Rosenau (1992), ‘The Relocation of Authority in a Shrinking World’