Science and Public Policy

Science and Public Policy is a leading refereed, international journal on public policies for science, technology and innovation, and on their implications for other public policies. It covers basic, applied, high, low, and any other types of S&T, and rich or poorer countries. It is read in around 70 countries, in universities (teaching and research), government ministries and agencies, consultancies, industry and elsewhere.

Click here for tables of contents, abstracts and index (all free), and full online texts of papers (free to subscribers, others may pay to view) at the IngentaConnect site — all since January 1999.

Click here for tables of contents and abstracts for Science and Public Policy for 1998 and earlier

It is published every month except January and September by Beech Tree Publishing.
ISSN (print) 0302-3427 and E-ISSN (electronic) 1471-5430.

It is edited by:
Dr David H Guston, Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes, Arizona State University, PO Box 874401, Tempe, AZ 85287-4401, USA, email scipol@asu.edu and
Dr Susana Borrás, Centerfor Business and Politics, Copenhagen Business School, Steen Blichersvej 22, 2000, Fredriksburg, Denmark; email: scipol.cbp@cbs.dk
Consulting editor is Professor Susan Cozzens, School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332-0345, USA

Click here for notes for authors

Book review editors are: Professor Cooper Langford, Science, Technology and Society Program, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4; email: chlangfo@ucalgary.ca; and Dr Jakob Edler, Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research, Breslauer Straße 48, D-76139 Karleruhe, Germany; email: j.edler@isi.fraunhofer.de

Editorial advisors include:
Mario Albornoz, Centre for Studies of Science, Development and Higher Education, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Daniele Archibugi, a Director of the National Research Council, Italy, Anthony Arundel, UNU-MERIT, The Netherlands, Phillip Cooke, Advanced Studies, University of Cardiff, UK, Paul Cunningham, PREST, Manchester Business School, UK, Charles Edquist, Lund Institute of Technology, Sweden, Shulin Gu Tsinghua, University, Beijing, China, David Hart, Public Policy, George Mason University, USA, Ron Johnston, Executive Director, Australian Centre for Innovation and International Competitiveness, Sydney, Australia, Calestous Juma, Co-ordinator, UN Millennium Project Task Force on Science, Technology and Innovation, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, USA, Gary Kass, Parliamentary Office of S&T, UK, Stefan Kuhlmann, School of Management and Governance, University of Twente, The Netherlands, Philippe Larédo, ENPC, Paris, France, Kong-Rae Lee, STEPI, South Korea, Rolf Lehming, Science Resources Statistics, NSF, USA, Loet Leydesdorff, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, Angela Liberatore, European Commission, Belgium, Elena Mirskaya, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia, Judith Mosoni-Fried, MTA KSZI, Budapest, Hungary, Johann Mouton, CREST, Stellenbosch University, South Africa, Richard R Nelson, Columbia University, USA, Helga Nowotny, Vice President, European Research Council, Hiroyuki Odagir, Economics, Hitotsubashi University, Japan, Osita Ogbu, African Technology Policy Studies Network, Kenya, Howard Rush, CENTRIM, Freeman Centre, Brighton, UK, Luis Sanz-Menéndez, Deputy Director-General, Ministry of S&T, Spain, Eric von Hippel, Head, Innovation and Entrepreneurship Group, MIT/Sloan School of Management, USA, Lea Velho, University of Campinas, Brazil, Bruno van Pottelsberghe, former Chief Economist, European Patents Office, now Free University of Brussels, Belgium


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Click here for special issue on the evaluation of the European Union Framework Programmes, October 2005


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