Does Corporate Funding Corrupt Science? | Stanford
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Hewlett Teaching Center, Stanford University | 370 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA
Event Details
Submitted by the Event Organizer
Some 65% of all research and development in the U.S. is funded by private interests.
History shows that the corporate funding of scientific research can be problematic — the tobacco industry offers a potent example. When corporations do science, is truth the ultimate goal, or is stockholder profit?
Please join five outstanding scholars and teachers as they take part in a panel discussion that asks, “Does Corporate Funding Corrupt Science?”:
Lisa Bero, Professor of Health Policy, UC San Francisco
Hank Greely, Professor of Law, Stanford
Dave Patterson, Professor of Computer Science, UC Berkeley
Robert Proctor, Professor of History, Stanford
Richard Zare, Professor of Chemistry, Stanford
These experts will examine at least five major industries: pharmaceuticals (Bero), biomedicine (Greely), software (Patterson), tobacco (Proctor), and chemistry (Zare). Subsequent discussion of the various controversies promises to be enlightening and important.
Does Corporate Funding Corrupt Science?
Date: 03/02/2012
Hewlett Teaching Center, Stanford University
370 Serra Mall, Stanford
Cost: FREE
Disclaimer: Please double check event information with the event organizer as events can be canceled, details can change after they are added to our calendar, and errors do occur.
Cost: FREE
Tags: biomedicine, biotech, chemistry, corporate, Funding, Pharmaceuticals, Research, Science, software, tobacco
Categories: Lectures & Workshops, South Bay