This book provides a powerful diagnosis of why the global governance of science struggles in the face of emerging powers. Through unpacking critical events in China and India over the past twenty years, it demonstrates that the ‘subversiveness’ assumed in the two countries’ rise in the life sciences reflects many of the regulatory challenges that are shared worldwide. It points to a decolonial imperative for science governance to be responsive and effective in a cosmopolitan world. By highlighting epistemic injustice within contemporary science, the book extends theories of decolonisation.
विषयसूची
Preface
1 The global science race and the decolonial imperative for governance
2 Unpacking the subaltern anxiety through modernisation and globalisation
3 Chinese life sciences’ ‘struggle for recognition’
4 India: self-sufficiency in a globalised world
5 The dragon-elephant tango: making sense of the rise of China and India
6 What global science will have been
Bibliography
लेखक के बारे में
Joy Y. Zhang is a Reader in Sociology at the University of Kent Saheli Datta Burton is a Research Fellow at University College London