We all, in everyday life, routinely ignore far more things than we pay attention to. This is no less the case in the science policy-making process, thus making the processes by which some matters become salient or absent open to empirical and theoretical investigation. In this respect, Absence in Science, Security and Policy addresses two main questions: how can people and institutions concerned with the ethical, legal and social implications of science and medicine become more mindful about the implications they are not addressing? How can the recognition of such absences be translated into analysis that is practically relevant? This edited volume explores the absent and missing in debates about science and security. Through a range of case studies, including biological and chemical weapons control, science journalism, nanotechnology research and neuroethics, the contributors explore how matters become absent, ignored or forgotten and the implications of this for ethics, policy and society.
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vii | |
Acknowledgments |
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viii | |
Notes on Contributors |
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ix | |
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xiii | |
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Part I Ways of Seeing, Ways of Not Seeing |
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1 Sensing Absence: How to See What Isn't There in the Study of Science and Security |
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3 | (31) |
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OPEN This chapter is available open access under a CC BY license via palgraveconnect.com |
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2 An Open Day for Secrets: Biological Warfare, Steganography, and Hiding Things in Plain Sight |
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34 | (21) |
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Part II Practices of Inattention |
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3 What ELSA/I Makes Big and Small in Nanotechnology Research |
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55 | (23) |
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4 Missing the Obvious: Coping with Scientific and Technological Change in Chemical and Biological Weapons Arms Control, 1968--2013 |
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78 | (15) |
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5 Non-News Values in Science Journalism |
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93 | (21) |
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6 Project Jefferson: Technological Surprises and Critical Omissions |
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114 | (18) |
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7 Taking Care in Synthetic Biology |
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132 | (25) |
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Part III Sights and Sensitivities |
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8 What Counts as the Hostile Use of Chemicals? |
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157 | (23) |
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9 A Phoenix of the Modern World: The Re-emergence of National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity and its Implications for Scientific Practitioners |
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180 | (20) |
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10 Causing Problems: Classification of Humanitarian Concerns Regarding Explosive Weapons |
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200 | (26) |
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226 | (12) |
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Index |
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238 | |
Malcolm Dando, University of Bradford, UK Brett Edwards, University of Bath, UK Sam Weiss Evans, Harvard University, USA Emma Frow, Arizona State University, USA Felicity Mellor, Imperial College London, UK Richard Moyes, Article 36, UK James Revill, University of Sussex, UK Michael Schillmeier, University of Exeter, UK Kathleen M. Vogel, NC State University, USA John R.Walker, Foreign and Commonwealth Office, UK Gerald Walther, University of Manchester, UK