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ENDNOTES


  1. THE LAB COMMUNITY
    Confronting the Social Context of Science


(^1) C. Perrow. Normal Accidents: Living With High-Risk
Technologies(Basic Books, New York, 1984).
(^2) D. Vaughan. The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky
Technology, Culture and Deviance at NASA(University
of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1996).
(^3) E. A. Cohen and J. Gooch. Military Misfortunes: The
Anatomy of Failure in War(Vintage, New York, 1991).
Two Cultures and the Revolution in Biotechnology
(^1) C. P. Snow. The Two Cultures. (Cambridge University
Press, New York, 1959).



  1. SCIENTIFIC CITIZENSHIP
    The Misconduct of Others:
    Prevention Techniques for Researchers
    This article is modified from one published by the
    author in the American Psychological Society’s
    Observer. Reproduced with permission.


(^1) Code of Federal Regulations. 42 C.F.R. Part 50 subpart
A, section 102.
(^2) http://ori.hhs.gov.
Making a Difference:
The Three R’s of Public Science Policy
(^1) http://www.jscpp.org.
Great Expectations or Realistic Expectations?
(^1) http://www.ascb.org/publicpolicy/nasareport.html.
(^2) http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/proj05u.htm.



  1. WRITING AND PUBLISHING
    Me Write Pretty One Day:
    How to Write a Good Scientific Paper
    Some of the content of this article is based on
    an earlier guide by R. Ward and K. LaMarco.

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