Science and Public Policy
Volume 23 - 52
Current editor(s): Nicoletta Corrocher, Jeong-Dong Lee, Mireille Matt and Nicholas Vonortas From Oxford University Press Bibliographic data for series maintained by Oxford University Press (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 50, issue 6, 2023
- Openness, innovation, and science policy in the age of data-driven medicine pp. 947-949

- Graham Dutfield and Katerina Sideri
- Making sense of knowledge-brokering organisations: boundary organisations or policy entrepreneurs? pp. 950-960

- Eleanor MacKillop, Andrew Connell, James Downe and Hannah Durrant
- Priorities in research portfolios: exploring the need for upstream research in cardiometabolic and mental health pp. 961-976

- Wouter van de, Alfredo Yegros-Yegros, Tim Willemse and Ismael Rafols
- Diversification, integration, and opening: developments in modelling for policy pp. 977-987

- Anja Bauer, Leo Capari, Daniela Fuchs and Titus Udrea
- Government subsidies, private R&D, and global value chains position: the moderating role of task complexity pp. 988-1000

- Furong Qian
- Improving the Regional Innovation Scoreboard for policy: how about innovation efficiency? pp. 1001-1017

- Peter Teirlinck and Andre Spithoven
- Co-design and its consequences: developing a shared patient engagement framework in the IMI-PARADIGM project pp. 1018-1028

- Callum J Gunn, Sevgi E, Teresa Finlay, Lidewij Eva, Teun Zuiderent-Jerak and Tjerk Jan Schuitmaker-Warnaar
- Multilevel innovation policy mix in China: do local programmes complement national programmes? pp. 1029-1043

- Xing Shi, Yating Guo, Huiping Dong and Shuai Wang
- Research excellence and scientific advisory boards pp. 1044-1058

- Maya Göser, Stefan Wimmer and Johannes Sauer
- To govern or be governed: an integrated framework for AI governance in the public sector pp. 1059-1072

- Hyeri Choi and Min Jae
- Local market, central government support, and local governments’ homegrown development strategy in high-tech industries pp. 1073-1090

- Huidong Peng
- Fun and less fun funding: the experiential affordances of research grant conditions pp. 1091-1102

- Andreas Kjær and Ea Høg
- Evidence-neglect: addressing a barrier to UK health and climate policy ambitions pp. 1103-1109

- Theresa M Marteau
Volume 50, issue 5, 2023
- A new facet of cumulative advantage in higher education finance pp. 819-830

- Lars Herberholz
- Does international R&D cooperation under institutional agreements have a greater impact than those without agreements? pp. 831-841

- Paulo Henrique, Sergio Salles-Filho, Adriana Bin, Yohanna Juk and Fernando Antonio
- European industrial policy for the green and digital revolution pp. 842-857

- Alessio Terzi, Monika Sherwood and Aneil Singh
- Do winners pick government? How scale-up experience shapes entrepreneurs’ assessments of innovation policy mixes pp. 858-870

- Steven Denney, Travis Southin and David A Wolfe
- Researcher roles in collaborative governance interventions pp. 871-880

- Taru Peltola, Sanna-Riikka Saarela, Juha M, Tapio Litmanen, Jani Lukkarinen, Ismo Pölönen, Outi Ratamäki, Heli Saarikoski, Miikka Salo and Suvi Vikström
- Responding to uncertainty in the COVID-19 pandemic: perspectives from Bavaria, Germany pp. 881-892

- Amelia Fiske, Johannes Lange, Alena Buyx and Stuart McLennan
- Herding in policy responses to coronavirus disease 2019 pp. 893-904

- Jianfeng Guo, Xuemei Zhang, Fu Gu, Jiannan Zhu, Chao Deng, Xinze Zhao and Xiaohan Yang
- Institutional logics in the open science practices of university–industry research collaboration pp. 905-916

- Annina Lattu and Yuzhuo Cai
- Brazilian Air Force acquisition policies: observing absorptive capacity and contingent factors in aeronautical beneficiary companies pp. 917-934

- Thiago Caliari, Mayara Bovo, Lígia Maria and Rodrigo Arnaldo
- North–South research funding dynamics of collaborative projects: researchers’ appropriation strategies of agencies’ project frameworks pp. 935-946

- Montserrat Alom
Volume 50, issue 4, 2023
- Are we nearly there yet? New technology adoption and labor demand in Peru pp. 565-578

- Rafael Novella, David Rosas-Shady and Alfredo Alvarado
- Observable and unobservable causes of the gender gap in S&T funding for young researchers pp. 579-590

- Diana Suarez, Florencia Fiorentin and Mariano Pereira
- Centres of excellence in Latin America: how do these differ from other experiences? pp. 591-602

- Pavel Gabriel
- From global climate goals to local practice—mission-oriented policy enactment in three Swedish regions pp. 603-618

- Nancy Brett, Thomas Magnusson and Hans Andersson
- Evaluation of research proposals by peer review panels: broader panels for broader assessments? pp. 619-632

- Rebecca Abma-Schouten, Joey Gijbels, Wendy Reijmerink and Ingeborg Meijer
- Barriers as moderators in the innovation process pp. 633-654

- Diego R de, Nicholas S and André T
- The experimentation–accountability trade-off in innovation and industrial policy: are learning networks the solution? pp. 655-669

- Slavo Radosevic, Despina Kanellou and George Tsekouras
- Policy entrepreneurs, entrepreneurial strategies, and institutional contexts in Interreg Europe pp. 670-680

- Arnault Morisson and Evangelia Petridou
- Analysis of COVID-19 recovery and resilience policy in Finland: a transformative policy mix approach pp. 681-694

- Paula Kivimaa, Jani Lukkarinen and David Lazarevic
- Disentangling the local context—imagined communities and researchers’ sense of belonging pp. 695-706

- Serge P J M, Mads P Sørensen, Nick Allum and Abigail-Kate Reid
- Ideology, knowledge, and the assessment of science policy agencies pp. 707-718

- Kathryn Haglin and Arnold Vedlitz
- Exploring indicators for monitoring sociotechnical system transitions through portfolio networks pp. 719-741

- Caetano C R, Oscar Yandy and Cristian Matti
- Science diplomacy in the Global South—an introduction pp. 742-748

- Derya Büyüktanir and Pierre-Bruno Ruffini
- Coloniality in science diplomacy—evidence from the Atlantic Ocean pp. 742-753

- Andrei Polejack
- The globalization of science diplomacy in the early 1970s: a historical exploration pp. 749-758

- Sam Robinson, Matthew Adamson, Gordon Barrett, Lif Lund, Simone Turchetti, Aya Homei, Péter Marton, Leah Aronowsky, Iqra Choudry, Johan Gärdebo, Jaehwan Hyun, Gerardo Ienna, Carringtone Kinyanjui, Beatriz Martínez-Rius, Júlia Mascarello, Doubravka Olsakova, Giulia Rispoli and Waqar Zaidi
- Scientific collaborations between Latin America and Europe: an approach from science diplomacy towards international engagement pp. 754-766

- Luisa F, Aura Fossati, Nussaïbah B, Kleinsy Bonilla, Bernardo Urbani, Radenka Krsmanović and Tereza Vizinová
- Science diplomacy from a nation-state’s perspective: a general framing and its application to Global South countries pp. 771-781

- Pierre-Bruno Ruffini and Olga Krasnyak
- Science diplomacy from the Global South: the case of intergovernmental science organizations pp. 782-793

- Anna-Lena Rüland, Nicolas Rüffin, Katharina Cramer, Prosper Ngabonziza, Manoj Saxena and Stefan Skupien
- China’s use of formal science and technology agreements as a tool of diplomacy pp. 807-817

- Caroline S Wagner and Denis F
Volume 50, issue 3, 2023
- The promise of artificial intelligence in combating public corruption in the emerging economies: A conceptual framework pp. 355-370

- Henry Adobor and Robert Yawson
- Online panel work through a gender lens: implications of digital peer review meetings pp. 371-381

- Helen Peterson and Liisa Husu
- The role of intermediaries in nurturing innovation ecosystems: a case study of Singapore’s manufacturing sector pp. 382-397

- Huey Yuen Ng, Yining Luo and Hyunkyu Park
- Missions as boundary objects for transformative change: understanding coordination across policy, research, and stakeholder communities pp. 398-415

- Matthijs J Janssen, Joeri Wesseling, Jonas Torrens, K Matthias, Caetano Penna and Laurens Klerkx
- Chinese public university patents during 2006–20: a comprehensive investigation and comparative study pp. 416-432

- Lin Zhang, Fan Qi, Ying Huang, Bart Van Looy, Lixin Chen and Ozcan Saritas
- Opportunity or responsibility? Tracing co-creation in the European policy discourse pp. 433-444

- Anja K Ruess, Ruth Müller and Sebastian M Pfotenhauer
- European scholarly journals from small- and mid-size publishers: mapping journals and public funding mechanisms pp. 445-456

- Mikael Laakso and Anna-Maija
- University–industry cooperation: a taxonomy of intermediaries pp. 457-490

- Telmo N Santos, José G Dias and Sandro Mendonça
- A research on the effectiveness of innovation policy for regional innovation under Chinese long-range plan pp. 491-508

- Boxu Yang, Xielin Liu, Yuchen Gao and Langmei Zhu
- Mission-oriented innovation policy as a hybridisation process: the case of transforming a national fertilising system pp. 509-520

- Erkki-Jussi Nylén, Jan-Erik Johanson and Jarmo Vakkuri
- Open science–related policies in Europe pp. 521-530

- Sh Moradi and S Abdi
- Competition, open innovation, and growth challenges in the semiconductor industry: the case of Europe’s clusters pp. 531-547

- Robert Huggins, Andrew Johnston, Max Munday and Chen Xu
- Boundary work in the regional innovation policy mix: SME digital technology diffusion policies in Wales pp. 548-558

- Dylan Henderson
- Perspectives on the narrowing and clustering of research trajectories: an epistemic threat to medical progress? pp. 559-563

- Mark P Khurana and Emil Bargmann Madsen
Volume 50, issue 2, 2023
- What governs attitudes toward artificial intelligence adoption and governance? pp. 161-176

- Matthew R O’Shaughnessy, Daniel S Schiff, Lav R Varshney, Christopher J Rozell and Mark A Davenport
- The dynamics of policy coordination: The case of China’s science and technology policy-making pp. 177-193

- Ying Huang, Yashan Li, Jinge Mao, Ruinan Li and Lin Zhang
- A legitimacy approach to social innovation initiatives at universities pp. 194-205

- Letizia Donati and Caroline Wigren-Kristoferson
- Policy-making and evaluation of gender equality programmes: Context, power, and resistance in the transformation process pp. 206-218

- Evanthia Kalpazidou Schmidt, Rachel Palmén and Susanne Bührer
- Making sense of transdisciplinarity: Interpreting science policy in a biotechnology centre pp. 219-229

- Maria Bårdsen Hesjedal and Heidrun Åm
- Can innovation vouchers promote SMEs’ innovation in China: A flexible conditional difference-in-differences analysis pp. 230-242

- Nini Xu and Junhua Guo
- Numeric work: The efforts of calculation actors to make numbers count in climate and energy policy pp. 243-252

- Susanne Jørgensen and Knut H Sørensen
- Discussion on the entrepreneurial university in Spain: The case of the Madrid Region pp. 253-274

- Natalia Dévora Quintero and Gonzalo León Serrano
- Does offensive patent insurance promote corporate innovation? Evidence from a quasi-experiment pp. 275-286

- Ying Wu and Yi Zhang
- Coevolution between institutions and scientific organizations: The case of IMPA pp. 287-303

- Renata Petrin, Roberto Gonzalez Duarte and Irene Kazumi Miura
- Gender mainstreaming research funding: a study of effects on STEM research proposals pp. 304-317

- Karolin Sjöö and Wolfgang Kaltenbrunner
- Guidance on research integrity provided by pan-European discipline-specific learned societies: A scoping review pp. 318-335

- Rosie Hastings, Krishma Labib, Iris Lechner, Lex Bouter, Guy Widdershoven and Natalie Evans
- Mission incomplete: Layered practices of monitoring and evaluation in Swedish transformative innovation policy pp. 336-349

- Harald Rohracher, Lars Coenen and Olga Kordas
- Technology entrepreneurship and innovation hubs: Perspectives on the universal regulatory sandbox pp. 350-353

- Thomas A Hemphill
Volume 50, issue 1, 2023
- Balancing interests between freedom and censorship: Organizational strategies for quality assurance in science communication pp. 1-14

- Benedikt Fecher, Freia Kuper, Birte Fähnrich, Hannah Schmid-Petri, Thomas Schildhauer, Peter Weingart and Holger Wormer
- A computational approach to study the gap and barriers between science and policy pp. 15-29

- Nancy Li, Markus Luczak-Roesch and Flavia Donadelli
- ‘Unite behind the Science!’ Climate movements’ use of scientific evidence in narratives on socio-ecological futures pp. 30-41

- Simone Rödder and Christopher Niklas
- The industry of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies in Brazil: Public policies as instruments of technology upgrading pp. 42-58

- Renan G L, Bruno B, Paola R and Hillegonda M D
- Negotiating space for knowledge co-production pp. 59-71

- Lisa Verwoerd, Hilde Brouwers, Eva Kunseler, Barbara Regeer and Evelien de Hoop
- Subsidy policies of a fresh supply chain considering the inputs of blockchain traceability service system pp. 72-86

- Pan Liu, Xiaoyan Cui and Ye Li
- Policy seduction and governance resistance? Examining public funding agencies and academic institutions on decarbonisation research pp. 87-101

- Abbas Abdul
- Prioritizing diversity? The allocation of US federal R&D funding pp. 104-119

- Alexandra Graddy-Reed and Lauren Lanahan
- Environmental policy and R&D productivity: A case study from the Korean Emissions Trading Scheme pp. 120-128

- Jung Youn
- Perspective on honest brokers in science: Broadening conflicts of interest and role academies could play pp. 129-132

- Philippe C
- Fostering a research integrity culture: Actionable advice for institutions pp. 133-145

- Steven De and Stijn Conix
- Co-creating end-user roles. Understanding the new variety of user involvement in public sector innovation pp. 146-159

- Benjamin Lipp, Mathieu Baudrin, Carlos Cuevas-Garcia, Federica Pepponi, Magdalena Rozwadowska and Shelly Tsui
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