Scientific Advice to the Nineteenth-Century British State

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Product Details
Price
$80.50
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
464
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.53 X 1.1 inches | 1.7 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780822947905

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About the Author
Roland Jackson is a historian of nineteenth-century science, an honorary research fellow at University College London, and a visiting fellow at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. His career has spanned scientific research, science education, science communication, science policy, and the history of science. He has been head of museum at the Science Museum London, chief executive of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and executive chair of Sciencewise, which works across the UK government on policy relating to controversial issues involving science and technology.
Reviews
Scientific advice, Roland Jackson makes clear, was shaped by the political climate, and the extent to which such advice was heeded depended on that climate. His argument is supported by a wealth of empirical data, his work the fruit of massive research, and his coverage of the field detailed and comprehensive. No other book offers such a thorough-going survey of scientific advice and its ramifications in nineteenth-century Britain.--John Gascoigne, author of Science and the State: From the Scientific Revolution to World War II
Jackson draws skillfully on an impressive array of sources to provide the first systematic account of the growing role of scientific advice to the nineteenth-century British state, on food and energy production, war and empire, industry, transport, taxation, and health. Combining history of science with history of the state, his book sheds new light on both the status of science and scope of government action.--Rebekah Higgitt, National Museums Scotland
Important, timely, and an excellent introduction to how science becomes institutionalized during this century, often at the expense of the Royal Society. Roland Jackson underlines the durable tension between the pursuit of knowledge as an individual endeavor (requiring independent funds) with state-funded research via official bodies. Anyone who wants to understand the relationship between British science and government during this period will have to read this book.--William J. Ashworth, University of Liverpool
This book is . . . destined to become a classic and an obligatory read for scholars of virtually all aspects of nineteenth-century British science, engineering, and medicine, as well as scholars of nineteenth-century British politics.-- "The Renaissance Mathematicus"
Jackson's monograph is a timely and effective guide to the historical development of specialist knowledge in the business of governance.-- "Technology and Culture"