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11 - Politicizing Peer Review: The Legal Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Sidney Shapiro J.D.
Affiliation:
Professor of Law, University Distinguished Chair in Law at the Wake Forest School of Law
Wendy Wagner
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin
Rena Steinzor
Affiliation:
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Summary

The Role of Peer Review in the Crusade for “Sound” Science

Because the public at large strongly supports a prominent government role in protecting health and safety, opponents of regulation have tried to put a more acceptable face on their efforts by cloaking their opposition as a demand for “sound science.” As professors Thomas McGarity and Donald Hornstein have explained in Chapters 1 and 5 of this book, rather than dispute the public policies behind protective regulation of people and the environment, the “sound-science” campaign attempts to convince the public that strong regulation lacks an acceptable scientific rationale. This approach gives regulatory opponents the advantage of casting themselves as favoring regulatory protection in general, but allows them to combat specific regulations on the grounds that such measures are based on poor – or “junk” – science.

The “sound-science” campaign seeks to blur the crucial distinction between incomplete data and poor-quality data. For example, an excellent study of the adverse health effects caused by heightened blood lead levels can be incomplete with respect to the hazards of heightened levels of lead in the air if the rates of transfer between airborne lead and blood lead are poorly understood. Regulatory opponents seek to convince the public that the absence of knowledge about air-to-blood transfer rates means that the scientific evidence about the hazards of lead to human health is of poor quality.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rescuing Science from Politics
Regulation and the Distortion of Scientific Research
, pp. 238 - 254
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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