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  1. Hybrid knowledge: the transnational co-production of the gas centrifuge for uranium enrichment in the 1960s.John Krige - 2012 - British Journal for the History of Science 45 (3):337-357.
    The ‘how’ and the ‘why’ of knowledge circulation is explored in a study of the encounter between American and British nuclear scientists and engineers who together developed a gas centrifuge to enrich uranium in the 1960s. A fine-grained analysis of the transnational encounter reveals that the ‘how’ engages a wide variety of sometimes mundane modes of exchange in a series of face-to-face interactions over several years. The ‘why’ is driven by the reciprocal wish to improve the performance of the centrifuge, (...)
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  • Concluding conversation: decentring science diplomacy.Gordon Barrett, Claire Edington, Aya Homei, Kate Sullivan de Estrada & Zuoyue Wang - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-13.
    Gordon Barrett (GB): Research Associate, Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, University of Manchester, UK (special issue co-editor).
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  • Technology diplomacy in early Communist China: the visit to the Jingjiang Flood Diversion Project in 1952.Yue Liang - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-13.
    This article focuses on the 1952 visit to the Jingjiang Flood Diversion Project, the first large-scale water infrastructure built on the Yangzi river after the founding of the People's Republic of China, by a foreign delegation from the Asia-Pacific Peace Conference. Serving as a form of technology diplomacy, this trip advanced two main purposes for the newly established country – to build up closer ties with ‘foreign friends’ who advocated international peace in the context of the Korean War, and to (...)
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  • Reimagining Daoist Alchemy, Decolonizing Transhumanism: The Fantasy of Immortality Cultivation in Twenty‐First Century China.Zhange Ni - 2020 - Zygon 55 (3):748-771.
    This article studies a new fantasy subgenre that emerged in contemporary China, xiuzhen xiaoshuo (immortality cultivation fiction), which builds imaginary worlds around the magical practice of Chinese alchemy and fuses it with science and technology. After the arrival of the modern, Western triad of science, religion, and magic/superstition, alchemical practices of the Daoist tradition were labeled as a “superstition” to be eradicated; however, they persisted and began to flourish within and beyond the realm of fantasy literature in the late twentieth (...)
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  • The Rockefeller Foundation and the Post-WW2 Transnational Ecology of Science Policy: from Solitary Splendor in the Inter-war Era to a ‘Me Too’ Agenda in the 1950s. [REVIEW]Pnina G. Abir-Am - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (4):323-337.
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  • Building the Arsenal of Knowledge1.John Krige - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (4):280-296.
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  • The International History of the Strategic Defense Initiative: American Influence and Economic Competition in the Late Cold War.Peter J. Westwick - 2010 - Centaurus 52 (4):338-351.
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  • From Modernizing the Chinese Language to Information Science: Chao Yuen Ren’s Route to Cybernetics.Chen-Pang Yeang - 2017 - Isis 108 (3):553-580.
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  • Insect Control in Socialist China and the Corporate United States: The Act of Comparison, the Tendency to Forget, and the Construction of Difference in 1970s U.S.–Chinese Scientific Exchange.Sigrid Schmalzer - 2013 - Isis 104 (2):303-329.
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  • Globalizing Genomics: The Origins of the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration.Hallam Stevens - 2017 - Journal of the History of Biology 51 (4):657-691.
    Genomics is increasingly considered a global enterprise – the fact that biological information can flow rapidly around the planet is taken to be important to what genomics is and what it can achieve. However, the large-scale international circulation of nucleotide sequence information did not begin with the Human Genome Project. Efforts to formalize and institutionalize the circulation of sequence information emerged concurrently with the development of centralized facilities for collecting that information. That is, the very first databases build for collecting (...)
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  • Needham at the crossroads: history, politics and international science in wartime China.Thomas Mougey - 2017 - British Journal for the History of Science 50 (1):83-109.
    In 1946, the British biochemist Joseph Needham returned from a four-year stay in China. Needham scholars have considered this visit as a revelatory period that paved the way for his famous book seriesScience and Civilization in China. Surprisingly, however, Needham's actual time in China has remained largely unstudied over the last seventy years. As director of the Sino-British Scientific Cooperation Office, Needham travelled throughout Free China to promote cooperation between British and Chinese scientists to contain the Japanese invasion during the (...)
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  • Ray Wu as Fifth Business: Deconstructing collective memory in the history of DNA sequencing.Lisa A. Onaga - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 46 (1):1-14.
    The concept of ‘Fifth Business’ is used to analyze a minority standpoint and bring serious attention to the role of scientists who play a galvanizing role in a science but for multiple reasons appear less prominently in more common recounts of any particular development. Biochemist Ray Wu published a DNA sequencing experiment in March 1970 using DNA polymerase catalysis and specific nucleotide labeling, both of which are foundational to general sequencing methods today. The scant mention of Wu’s work from textbooks, (...)
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