Article ID: CBB524505473

Scientific Autonomy, Public Accountability, and the Rise of “Peer Review” in the Cold War United States (2018)

unapi

This essay traces the history of refereeing at specialist scientific journals and at funding bodies and shows that it was only in the late twentieth century that peer review came to be seen as a process central to scientific practice. Throughout the nineteenth century and into much of the twentieth, external referee reports were considered an optional part of journal editing or grant making. The idea that refereeing is a requirement for scientific legitimacy seems to have arisen first in the Cold War United States. In the 1970s, in the wake of a series of attacks on scientific funding, American scientists faced a dilemma: there was increasing pressure for science to be accountable to those who funded it, but scientists wanted to ensure their continuing influence over funding decisions. Scientists and their supporters cast expert refereeing—or “peer review,” as it was increasingly called—as the crucial process that ensured the credibility of science as a whole. Taking funding decisions out of expert hands, they argued, would be a corruption of science itself. This public elevation of peer review both reinforced and spread the belief that only peer-reviewed science was scientifically legitimate.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB524505473/

Similar Citations

Book Thurs, Daniel Patrick; (2007)
Science Talk: Changing Notions of Science in American Popular Culture (/isis/citation/CBB000773753/)

Book Munns, David P. D.; (2013)
A Single Sky: How an International Community Forged the Science of Radio Astronomy (/isis/citation/CBB001320933/)

Article Wolfe, Audra J.; (2010)
What Does It Mean to Go Public? The American Response to Lysenkoism, Reconsidered (/isis/citation/CBB001022644/)

Article James Lawrence Powell; (2016)
The Consensus on Anthropogenic Global Warming Matters (/isis/citation/CBB862128887/)

Book Elisabetta Bini; Elisabetta Vezzosi; (2020)
Scienziati e guerra fredda: Tra collaborazione e diritti umani (/isis/citation/CBB957549150/)

Book Tietge, David J.; (2002)
Flash Effect: Science and the Rhetorical Origins of Cold War America (/isis/citation/CBB000201573/)

Book Jenkins, Dominick; (2002)
The Final Frontier: America, Science, and Terror (/isis/citation/CBB000302210/)

Book Lavine, Matthew; (2013)
The First Atomic Age: Scientists, Radiations, and the American Public, 1895--1945 (/isis/citation/CBB001213740/)

Article Davidson, Roei; (2014)
Financial Markets and Authoritative Proximity in Personal Finance Magazines (/isis/citation/CBB001420115/)

Thesis Newell, Catherine Lea; (2012)
The Wheels of Titan: Faith, the Future, and the American Frontier (/isis/citation/CBB001560757/)

Article Rekdal, Ole Bjørn; (2014)
Academic Urban Legends (/isis/citation/CBB001421187/)

Article C.G.M. Paxton; D. Naish; (2019)
Did Nineteenth Century marine vertebrate fossil discoveries influence sea serpent reports? (/isis/citation/CBB528039835/)

Article Sally Shuttleworth; Berris Charnley; (2016)
Science Periodicals in the Nineteenth and Twenty-First Centuries (/isis/citation/CBB797624948/)

Authors & Contributors
Vezzosi, Elisabetta
Bini, Elisabetta
Charles G.M. Paxton
Benno Nietzel
Darren Naish
Ciglioni, Laura
Journals
Social Studies of Science
Science as Culture
Public Understanding of Science
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
History of the Human Sciences
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
Publishers
Viella
University of California, Santa Barbara
Verso
The College of William and Mary
Rutgers University Press
Palgrave Macmillan
Concepts
Public understanding of science
Science and society
Cold War
Science and politics
Popularization
Science and war; science and the military
People
Camp, L. Sprague de
Müller, Hermann Joseph
Dobzhansky, Theodosius
Mendel, Gregor Johann
Lysenko, Trofim Denisovich
Gore, Albert
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
21st century
20th century, late
20th century, early
18th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Italy
Europe
Greenland
Netherlands
Institutions
Genetics Society of America
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment