1st Edition

The Economics of Science: A Critical Realist Overview Volume 1: Illustrations and Philosophical Preliminaries

By David Tyfield Copyright 2012
248 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

248 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

248 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Dramatic and controversial changes in the funding of science over the past two decades, towards its increasing commercialization, have stimulated a huge literature trying to set out an "economics of science". Whether broadly in favour or against these changes, the vast majority of these frameworks employ ahistorical analyses that cannot conceptualise, let alone address, the questions of "why have... Read more

Section 1

1. Introduction

Section 2

2. The Commercialisation of Science and the Construction of the Knowledge-Based Bio-Economy

3. The KBBE Reality – The Case of Agriculture

4. Intellectual Property Rights and the Global Commodification of Knowledge

5. Privatizing Chinese Science: National Development vs. Neoliberal Financialization

Section 3

6. Critical Realism and the Importance of Ontological Attention

7. Critical Realism and Beyond in Economics

8. The Realist Transcendental Argument

Biography

David Tyfield is a lecturer at the Centre for Mobilities Research and Sociology Department, Lancaster University.  He is reviews editor of Science as Culture and formerly an editor of the Journal of Critical Realism. 

"Tyfield has done a good job of work, not only in establishing the need for a Cultural Political Economy of Science, but also in identifying some of the component parts out of which it might eventually emerge."— Steve Fleetwood, Journal of Critical Realism

"This book is a welcome return to theorizing in STS...  Tyfield’s book shows what a fruitful way into fundamental philosophical questions a political-economic approach provides."— Charles Thorpe, Science as Culture