This history of the government-funded synthetic rubber research program (1942-1956) offers a rare analysis of a cooperative research program geared to the improvement of existing products and the creation of new ones. The founders of the program believed the best way to further research in the new field was through collaboration among corporations, universities, and the federal government. Morris concludes that, in fact, the effort was ultimately a failure and that vigorous competition proves the best way to stimulate innovation. Government programs, like the rubber research program, are far better at improving existing products, the author contends, than creating wholly new ones.
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Arnold Thackray is emeritus professor of the University of Pennsylvania where he founded the Department of History and Sociology of Science. He founded or extended the Chemical Heritage Foundation (Science History Institute), History of Science Society, Science History Consultants, and Life Sciences Foundation, and his global scholarship is extensively published.