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sidebar3.jpg Chris Mooney is a freelance writer and the author of two books, The Republican War on Science and Storm World. For more information see his bio, events, articles, or visit him on Wikipedia and YouTube.

Sheril Kirshenbaum is a marine biologist at Duke University. Sometimes she's a classicist, radio jock, or congressional staffer. Never sure what's next, she continues to enjoy the journey...

Chris & Sheril have a sound track and are currently working on ScienceDebate2008, which they just described in:

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« Change Begins With You | Main | Dow Jones Industrial Average Falls Below 9,000 »

A Year's Worth of Writings at Science Progress

Category: Politics and Science
Posted on: October 8, 2008 12:20 PM, by Chris C. Mooney

I've now been writing for this website since October of 2007, and have delighted to watch it mature into one of the top sites for serious science policy analysis on the web. To that end, my one year anniversary column, entitled "A Year's Worth of Thinking About Science Policy," enumerates five of the recurrent themes that have emerged from the site:

1. We need a new administration that takes science much more seriously across the board--that listens to scientists, that follows recommendations and wants to restore integrity to science in the federal government.
2. We need a similar rapprochement between science and Congress.
3. Amid concerns about U.S. competitiveness in science, let's not forget that today the youngest scientists in America are struggling, disadvantaged in trying to get grants, and stuck in postdoc holding patterns.
4. While the American science community still leads the world in research, it has not really emphasized outreach and communication, and as a result has seen declining societal influence and relevance.
5. All of this matters quite a great deal because advances in the life sciences--in particular, genetics and neuroscience--stand poised to radically transform our understanding of human identity, free will, morality, and obligations between generations. Unless we reunite science with politics and culture, we will face a rocky road indeed as a new set of science-related controversies begin to erupt.

You can read the full column here.

Comments

6. And Obama can do most of this

Posted by: Wavefunction | October 8, 2008 2:46 PM

Have you noticed that McCain's favorite earmarks to attack deal with science and technology? ones that were not added in secret back room deals, but proudly announced and put into bills up front (and in the case of the Adler Planetarian, removed in committee).

McCain is about as antiscience and technology as one can get. I wish Obama had nailed him to the wall on the "overhead projector" issue last night. to attack a request for funding science education is ridiculous.

Posted by: randy | October 8, 2008 11:47 PM

I too have noticed that this site has progressed. Cheers!

Jill

Posted by: Jill Gregerson | November 17, 2008 10:43 AM

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