Beschreibung:
With an international team of experts presenting case studies and analyses drawn from the US, UK, Asia and Europe, Collaboration in the New Life Sciences offers a critical examination of the causes and consequences of changing patterns of scientific collaboration in the life sciences. It will appeal to scholars and students of science and technology studies, as well as those interested in science, social policy, and the sociology of work and organizations.
Part I Collaboration Arises; Chapter 1 Collecting Collaborations: Understanding Life Together, Niki Vermeulen, Bart Penders; Chapter 2 Organising the Field: Collaboration in the History of Ecology and Environmental Science, Stephen Bocking; Chapter 3 Multidisciplinary Collaborations in Toxicology and Paleo-ecology: Equal Means to Different Ends, Laurens K. Hessels, Stefan de Jong, Harro van Lente; Part II Collaboration in Ecology and the Environment; Chapter 4 Two Approaches to Big Science: An Analysis of LTER and NEON, Ann Zimmerman, Bonnie A. Nardi; Chapter 5 Integrating the Social into the Ecological: Organisational and Research Group Challenges, John N. Parker; Chapter 6 Infrastructuring Ecology: Challenges in Achieving Data Sharing, karen S. Baker, Florence Millerand; Chapter 7 Customisation of Transdisciplinary Collaboration in the Integrated Management of Contaminated Sites, Vivien Behrens, Matthias Gross; Chapter 8 A Data Bias in Interdisciplinary Cooperation in the Sciences: Ecology in Climate Change Research, Chunglin Kwa, René Rector; Part III Collaboration in the Molecular Life Sciences; Chapter 9 Matchmaking Mechanisms: Collaborative Arrangements in Proteomics and Bioinformatics, Jamie Lewis; Chapter 10 Systems Biology, Interdisciplinarity and Disciplinary Identity, Jane Calvert; Chapter 11 The Rice Sequence Collaborations: Globalisation, Innovation Networks and the Burgeoning Life Sciences in Asia, Lyndal Halliday; Part IV Collaboration in the New Life Sciences Revisited; Chapter 12 Collaborationism, Wesley Shrum;