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  1. The Fifth Branch: Science Advisers as Policymakers.Sheila Jasanoff - 1990 - Harvard Univ Press.
    These are just some of the many controversial and timely questions that Sheila Jasanoff asks in this study of the way science advisers shape federal policy.
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  • Court and controversy: patenting science in the nineteenth century.Paul Lucier - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Science 29 (2):139-154.
    In the autumn of 1851, on the occasion of the American Institute of New York's annual fair, the Boston chemist and geologist Charles Jackson chose as the subject of his address the ‘Encouragement and Cultivation of the Sciences in the United States’. Playing on popular enthusiasm for science and technology, Jackson rehearsed the wondrous progress of the arts and the role of science in that progress. Science was the ‘Hand-maiden of the Arts’, and most assuredly the ‘maid of honor’, he (...)
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  • A History of the Criminal Law of England.James Fitzjames Stephen - 1996 - Routledge.
    As a practising lawyer and judge, it is the insights gained from Stephen's own experience that give an added practical dimension to this work. As well as his accounts of the history of the branches of the law, Stephen gives several fascinating analyses of famous trials, and explores the relation of madness to crime and the relation of law to ethics, physiology, and mental philosophy. His discussion also includes the subjects of criminal responsibility, offences against the state, the criminal jurisdiction (...)
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  • Public Science and Public Policy in Victorian England.R. MacLeod & P. W. J. Bartrip - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (5):528-528.
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