Key Publications

Bijsterveld, K.T. (2015). Ears-on exhibitions: Sound in the history museum. The Public Historian, 37(4), 73-90.

Bont, R.F.J. de (2015). ’Primitives’ and protected areas: International conservation and the ‘naturalization’ of indigenous people, Ca. 1910-1975. Journal of the History of Ideas, 76, 215-236.

Bont, R.F.J. de (2015). Stations in the field: A history of place-based animal research, 1870-1930. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.

Bouder, F. (2015). Risk communication of vaccines: Challenges in the post-trust environment. Current Drug Safety, 10, 9-15.

Bruyninckx, J.L.M. (2015). Trading Twitter. Amateur recorders and economies of scientific exchange at the Cornell Library of Natural Sounds. Social Studies of Science, 45(3), 344-370.

Cuijpers, Y. & Lente, H. van (2015). Early diagnostics and Alzheimer’s disease: Beyond ‘cure’ and ‘care’. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 93, 54-67.

Harris, A. & Guillemin, M. (2015). Notes on the medical underground: Migrant doctors at the margins. Health Sociology Review, 24(2), 163-174.

Lachmund, J.D. (2015). Strange birds. Ornithology and the advent of the collared dove in post-World War II Germany. Science in Context, 28(2), 259-284.

Mody, C. (2015). What do scientists and engineers do all day? On the structure of scientific Normalcy. In A. Bokulich & W.J. Devlin (Eds.), Kuhn’s structure of scientific revolutions: 50 years on (Boston Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science, 311) (pp. 91-104). Dordrecht: Springer.

Supper, A. (2015). Data karaoke: Sensory and bodily skills in conference presentations. Science as Culture, 24(4), 436-457.

Full overview of MUSTS publications in 2015