Rachel Carson Prize (academic book prize)

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Rachel Carson Prize
Awarded forA book "of social or political relevance" in the field of science and technology studies
Sponsored bySociety for Social Studies of Science
Date1998 (1998)
Websitewww.4sonline.org/prizes/carson

The Rachel Carson Prize is awarded annually by the Society for Social Studies of Science, an international academic association based in the United States. It is given for a book "of social or political relevance" in the field of science and technology studies. This prize was created in 1996.[1]

Honorees[]

Year Recipient Awarded work
1998 Diane Vaughan The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASA
1999 Steven Epstein Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge
2000 The Struggle for Water: Politics, Rationality, and Identity in the American Southwest
2001 Andrew Hoffman From Heresy to Dogma: An Institutional History of Corporate Environmentalism
2002 Science On Stage: Expert Advice as Public Drama
2003 Simon Cole Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification
2004 Fluent Bodies
2005 The Male Pill
2006 Joseph Dumit Picturing Personhood: Brain Scans and Biomedical Identity
2007 Charis Thompson Making Parents: The Ontological Choreography of Reproductive Technologies
2008 The Nuclear Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico
2009 Jeremy Greene Prescribing by Numbers
2010 Just One Child
2011 Icons of Life: A Cultural History of Human Embryos
2012 Stefan Helmreich Alien Oceans
2013 Ecologies of Comparison
2014 Robert N. Proctor Golden Holocaust: Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case for Abolition
2015 Refining Expertise. How responsible engineers subvert environmental justice challenges
2016 Being Nuclear: Africans and the Global Uranium Trade
2017 Adia Benton HIV Exceptionalism: Development Through Disease in Sierra Leone
2018 Life Support: Biocapital and the New History of Outsourced Labor
2019 Radiation Brain Moms and Citizen Scientists: The Gender Politics of Food Contamination
2020 Fractivism: Corporate Bodies and Chemical Bonds

References[]

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