Basic & Applied Research : the Language of Science Policy in the Twentieth Century / Kaldewey & Schauz.
Material type: TextPublisher: New York : Berghahn Books, 2018Description: 1 online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781785338113
- 1785338110
- Q125 .B32725 2018eb
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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E-Book | JSTOR Open Access Books | Available |
Introduction: Why do concepts matter in science policy? / Désirée Schauz and David Kaldewey - Part I. Genealogies of science policy discourses - Categorizing science in nineteenth and early twentieth-century Britain / Robert Bud - Professional devotion, national needs, fascist claims, and democratic virtues: the language of science policy in Germany / Désirée Schauz and Gregor Lax - Transforming pure science into basic research: the language of science policy in the United States / David Kaldewey and Désirée Schauz - Part II. Conceptual synchronization and cultural variation - Fundamental research and new scientific arrangements for the development of Britain's colonies after 1940 / Sabine Clarke - Basic research in the Max Planck Society: science policy in the Federal Republic of Germany, 1945-1970 / Carola Sachse - Beyond the basic/applied distinction? The scientific-technological revolution in the German Democratic Republic, 1945-1989 / Manuel Schramm - Applied science in Stalin's time: Hungary, 1945-1953 / György Péteri - Theory attached to practice: Chinese debates over basic research from thought remolding to the bomb, 1949-1966 / Zuoyue Wang - Part III. Outlook - The language of science policy in the twenty-first century: what comes after basic and applied research? / Tim Flink and David Kaldeway.
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