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Science for the People

Science for the People (SftP) is an organization that emerged from the antiwar culture of the United States in the late 1960s. Since 2014 it has experienced a revival focusing primarily on the dual nature of science. The organization advocates for a scientific establishment that is not isolated from society, rather one that uses scientific discoveries to advocate for and advance social justice and critically approach science as a social endeavor.[1]

History edit

The original group was composed of professors, students, workers, and other concerned citizens who sought to end potential oppression brought on by pseudoscience, or by what it considered the misuse of science. SftP generated much controversy in the 1970s for the radical tactics of some of its members. Over the initial few years there was an emergence of multiple differing opinions about the nature and mission of SftP should be. A faction wanted SftP to pay special attention to scientific issues that support class struggle. Another wanted to develop "a science for the people." The majority, however, wanted to be the scientific community's critical conscience and expose, from within, the dangers of the misuse of science. After a bitter internal struggle and departure of many, the group that remained focused its efforts, primarily through its magazine, on criticism of scientific misuse. During this time it became identified with prominent academic scientists such as Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin.[2]

Relationship with the scientific establishment edit

In the first five years SftP became known in the US scientific community for its attempts at disrupting the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). SftP members considered the AAAS, the world’s largest association of scientists, aligned with the government and the ruling elite. SftP particularly decried what it considered AAAS' complicity in war, sexism, racism and capitalism. A specific focus of the activists was the scientific community's involvement in the Vietnam war. Some of the tactics use to disrupt the AAAS meetings were picketing, demonstrations, impromptu speeches and confrontational interruptions.[3] These actions led to the arrest of several SftP activists in the early 1970s.[4]

Prior to the formation of SftP and its radical activism against the scientific establishment similar attempts had taken place with other organizations. One notable example is University of California, Berkeley nuclear physicist Charles Schwartz's 1967 attempt to amend the American Physical Society's (APS) constitution to allow 1% of members to call for a vote on any social or scientific issue. His motion was defeated because APS members did not think the society should take a stance on social issues. Another instance is the petition physicists began to the APS not to hold its 1970 meeting in Chicago because of the police brutality at the Democratic National Convention in 1968. The APS Council polled members and upheld its decision to keep the meeting in Chicago.[5]

In 1971 a proposed amendment to change the APS's mission statement to include the phrase "The Society...shall shun those activities which are judged to contribute harmfully to the welfare of mankind." was defeated.[5]

In following years, thanks to the actions of dedicated activists such as Schwartz and Martin Perl and others, APS took certain steps towards social responsibility. These included the 1972 creation of the Committee on the Status of Women in Physics[6] the 1979 boycott of states that had not ratified the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) and the 1983 Arms Control Resolution.[5] The latter was strongly criticized by George Keyworth, science advisor to president Ronald Reagan.[7]

Positions and views edit

Science for the People has positions in multiple different areas. It states on its website that it identifies as part of the "broader left."[8]

Anti-militarism edit

 
Statement by MIT scientists about the anti-war protest walkout on March 4, 1969

From its inception in January 1969 SftP opposed the involvement of scientists in the military. SftP also challenged the established notion that organizations such as the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the American Physical Society (APS) can stay neutral vis a vis the Vietnam war. Early on, a number of SftP scientists mobilized against US Congress' Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Program, arguing that the ABM was not feasible and the funds would be better spent on basic scientific research.[3] On March 4, 1969 MIT scientists staged a mass walkout in protest of the ABM.[9]

In April 1969, Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action (SESPA), SftP's predecessor, held an orderly march of 250 physicists to the White House to protest the ABM.[5]

This type of activism among scientists in the US led to the anti-ABM treaty of 1972 with the Soviet Union. In the 1980s SftP opposed president Reagan's attempt to revive the arms race with the Soviet Union as well as the US involvement in Nicaragua.[3]

Position on nuclear energy edit

In the mid-70s SftP cautioned against the ways that nuclear power was being promoted as a safe and environmentally clean alternative to coal.[3] In May 1976 the organization published a pamphlet arguing that the push for nuclear energy in the US over solar and other cleaner, cheaper alternatives benefitted the Atomic-Industrial complex and not the general public.[10] In the 1980s, especially in the wake of such disasters as Three Mile Island, SftP questioned the environmental safety of nuclear energy and the toxic waste it produces.[11][12]

Views on technology edit

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s SftP considered technology an important outcome of scientific advancement.[3] The organization favored the more concrete nature of technological developments over purely intellectual exercise of theoretical science.[3] Key to the group’s support for technology was the conviction that it should neither replace humans in the workplace nor harm the environment.[13] SftP members advocated for research and development programs to be chosen based on equity and social need and not to meet the government's needs of economic and military security.[14]

Position on science education edit

One of the core tenets of the SftP was that science and particularly biology and medicine cannot remain neutral. The organization not only believed that these disciplines should focus on correcting societal ills they also actively participated in educating people on work place hazards such as asbestos and other chemical and environmental exposures.[3]

In the early 1970s a Boston several SftP members known as the Boston Science Teaching Group, published and distributed series of pamphlets on topics such as genetics and ecology. Other members who were professional educators volunteered to teach biology in Boston’s underserved school districts. In 1971 two university professors, Rita Arditti and Tom Strunk, in an attempt to reform college biology curriculum, created a socially conscious first year college course called "Objecting to Objectivity: A Course in Biology". The course covered genetic engineering, physical and social limitations and implications of human gene maps, polygenic inheritance and prenatal diagnosis. It also discussed reproduction, birth control and abortion including the contemporary research and public policies about reproductive health. Other topics included population growth and Malthusian and Marxist theories and ethics of human research.[3]

Positions on race and gender edit

Advocating for racial and gender equality in science and medicine was one of the core tenets of SftP.[3] The organization included multiple feminist members who were pioneering women in science.[3] These included Arditti and other biologists such as, Anne Fausto-Sterling,[15] Freda Friedman Salzman[16] Ruth Hubbard,[17] and author and activist Barbara Beckwith. Hubbard, for instance, was the first woman to attain tenure in biology at Harvard University.[17] SftP also embraced the cause of gender equality in the society at large and advocated for reproductive rights, gender equality at the workplace and addressed issues surrounding sexuality.[3] It also fought against domestic violence and traditional gender roles in family structure.[3] While focusing on the world of science, feminist members of SftP faced an uphill battle in introducing gender parity for women in science at the universities.[3] They also sought to change the discriminatory gender dynamics in academia and in laboratories.[3]

SftP's efforts at promoting gender equality were paralleled with its efforts to promote racial and ethnic equality.[3] Although made up primarily of white Americans, some SftP members maintained relations with the Black Panther Party.[3] The two organizations urged the scientific community to create a free science program for black communities to enhance their scientific knowledge. The organization also criticized attacks on affirmative action and featured pieces by black and other minority scientists in its publication.[3] It also uncovered occupational health hazards among black and ethnic minority workers both in the US and abroad and fought to improve workplace conditions to eliminate these risks.[3] SftP's antiracist ideology put it at odds with the concepts of sociobiology and genetic determinism.[3]

Criticism of sociobiology edit

Biologists within SftP were highly critical of sociobiology, because of objectionable premises to the organization of the discipline and for the implications of using sociobiology to support racism, capitalism, and imperialism.[18] E. O. Wilson, a biologist and entomology professor in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, whose 1975 book Sociobiology: The New Synthesis had helped start the debate, wrote that "the political objections forcefully made by the Sociobiology Study Group of Science for the People in particular took me by surprise."[19]

SftP condemned the 1969 arguments that genetic differences were the underlying reason for differences in educational achievements between blacks and whites.[20] SftP also took issue with the Harvard XYY study in 1975.[20] The goal of the XYY study was to assess the risk of criminality the extra Y chromosome supposedly conferred.[20] The SftP scientists pointed out the ethical and methodological failures of the above study, including open ended consents, stigmatization of individuals with XYY, lack of controls and absence of double blinding.[20]

Positions on healthcare and medicine edit

Health care providers who were SftP members worked to strengthen healthcare infrastructure in underserved communities. They partnered with both the Black Panthers and Young Lords Organization to bring medical services to minorities, who often could not access the medical establishment both as practitioners and as patients.[21][22][23] SftP joined with other New Left Health organizations such as Health Policy Advisory Center and Medical Committee for Human Rights, fought for a fair and just healthcare system and advocated for women’s reproductive rights.[24]

SftP members, such as cancer researcher John Valentine at Wayne State University, exposed the capitalist interests that drove biomedical research. He argued that the 1971 National Cancer Act, signed by president Richard Nixon, failed to fund research into cancer causes such as poor preventative healthcare, occupational hazards and environmental exposures. He also criticized the use of public funds only to develop new chemotherapeutic agents instead of using some of it to minimize cancer risk due to workplace exposures and cancer-causing consumer products.[3]

SftP biologists also opposed recombinant DNA (rDNA) research before its public health and environmental impact can be thoroughly elucidated. They also expressed concerns and, accurately, predicted that rDNA can commercialize biomedical research and make it a market commodity. They urged the scientific community and the general public to consider who decides what research gets done and who benefits from these decisions.[3]

Views on agriculture and ecology edit

SftP argued that the existing contemporary agricultural models were neither benefitting the consumer, as food prices were rising astronomically, nor the farmer because their increasing debt without a raise in income.[25] The primary benefiters were input and output capital enterprises such has fertilizer companies, insecticide and herbicide manufacturers and farm machinery companies.[25] Members of the SftP formed the New World Agriculture Group (NWAG) that attempted to discover and develop ecologically rational alternative agricultural methods. Methods that protected the environment and preserved long-term productive capacity.[26] NWAG also proposed partnering with farm labor organizations to help bring an end to worker exploitation and the unequal wealth distribution.[26]

International relations edit

From its inception SftP condemned the use of technology and science to oppress and colonize other countries.[27] The organization gave the examples of both Vietnam and Cuba where, it stated, the US technological and scientific superiority was being used to both militarily and economically repress the smaller nations.[27] In response to the US policy, in 1971, a group of SftP members in Cambridge, Massachusetts collected and shipped large amounts of scientific books and journals to Vietnam and Cuba to aid in science education there.[27] The same year, molecular biologist Dr. Mark Ptashne and zoologist Dr. Bert Pfeiffer[28] went to Hanoi and lectured to Vietnamese scientists and physicians.[29] There were also successful efforts of networking with scientists in China,[30] and, in the 1980s, with the scientific and technological community in Nicaragua.[31]

2014 revitalization edit

Since the fall of 2014, an effort to revive and reorganize SftP has been underway. The SftP revitalization efforts emerged from the convention held April 11–13, 2014, at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.[18] At the 2014 conference various topics including the history of the SftP, health care, climate change, social justice, science education, gender and racial bias and militarization of science were discussed.[32] Since then, inspired by the original 1970s-1980s group, this new formation has dedicated itself to building a social movement around progressive and radical perspectives on science and society.[33]

Several local chapters of the SftP participated in the first annual March for Science on April 22, 2017.[34] The revived SftP also published a statement titled "Which Way for Science?".[35] The statement hailed the March for Science as "an exciting first step," but it also criticized the "apolitical" nature of the event and for their lack of attention to the experiences of scientists from historically marginalized groups such as women, people of color and others. "Which Way for Science" called attention to science's historic ties to U.S. capitalism and militarism, and called for a radical shift in its practice.[35]

2018 National Convention edit

The national convention, held at the University of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus in February 2018, brought together close to one hundred scientists and activists to formalize the group's bylaws and structure.[36][37] During the three days the attendees discussed the history and future of SftP, heard from local chapters that included representatives from Atlanta, Mexico City, New York and seven other North American locations.[38] The organizational structure of SftP was explored and these discussions served as a guide to developing an inclusive, radical and democratic political movement for scientists and STEM workers.[36] There were a dozen presentations on variety of topics related to SftP's mission.[39]

In addition to the call to organize more local chapters a number of working groups was also developed during the meeting.[40] These included groups dealing with Climate Change, Reproductive Justice, Science education and others.[40] Plans to participate in the second annual March for Science on April 14, 2018, were also initiated at the convention.[41]

Local chapters edit

  • Ann Arbor
  • Atlanta[42]
  • Boston
  • Canada[43]
  • Knoxville
  • Madison
  • Mexico City
  • New York City
  • Urbana Champaign
  • Washington, D.C.[44]
  • Western Massachusetts[45]
  • Twin Cities

Magazine edit

From 1969 to 1989 the original SftP published a quarterly, then bimonthly, magazine, that has been digitized and available on the organization's website.[46]

On July 28, 2018, at Caveat in New York City the publication was relaunched online with a special issue dedicated to geo-engineering.[47] The event also featured the premiere of a documentary on the organization.[48][49] The first regular issue of the relaunched magazine was published online and in print on May 1, 2019.[50]

Notable members edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Dual Nature of Science – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. April 12, 2018. Retrieved April 14, 2018.
  2. ^ . September 28, 2007. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved April 14, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Schmalzer, Sigrid; Chard, Daniel S.; Botelho, Alyssa (2018). Science for the people : documents from America's movement of radical scientists. Schmalzer, Sigrid,, Chard, Daniel S.,, Botelho, Alyssa. Amherst. ISBN 9781625343185. OCLC 1015275127.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ "Arrests Names" (PDF). science-for-the-people.org. January 3, 1973. (PDF) from the original on August 10, 2022. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d "Consciousness Raising". Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  6. ^ Committee on the Status of Women in Physics
  7. ^ "Science Policy Colorado University May 2009" (PDF).
  8. ^ "The Dual Nature of Science". Science for the People. April 12, 2018.
  9. ^ Suiter, Greta. "LibGuides: March 4: Scientists, Students, and Society: Archival Collections". libguides.mit.edu. Retrieved April 29, 2018.
  10. ^ "SfrP May 1976 Issue" (PDF).
  11. ^ Cina C and T Goldfarb, Three Mile Island and Nuclear Power. Science for the People 1979;11(4):10-17
  12. ^ Brown L, Allen D. "Toxic Waste and Citizen Action" (PDF). Science for the People. 15: 6–13.
  13. ^ "New Robotics" (PDF).
  14. ^ Dickson, David. "Choosing Technology" (PDF). Science for the People. 19: 6–10.
  15. ^ "Gender & Sexuality - Dr. Anne Fausto-Sterling". Dr. Anne Fausto-Sterling. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
  16. ^ Freda Friedman Salzman
  17. ^ a b c "Ruth Hubbard and the evolution of biology". Science | AAAS. October 5, 2016. Retrieved May 18, 2018.
  18. ^ a b c d e "Science for the People: The 1970s and Today". Retrieved April 13, 2014.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on June 18, 2006. Retrieved June 17, 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  20. ^ a b c d Richardson, Sarah S. (November 6, 2013). Sex itself : the search for male and female in the human genome. Chicago. ISBN 978-0226084688. OCLC 840937252.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ "Ten-Point Health Program of the Young Lords". www2.iath.virginia.edu. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  22. ^ Morabia, Alfredo (January 1, 2016). "Unveiling the Black Panther Party Legacy to Public Health". American Journal of Public Health. 106 (10): 1732–1733. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2016.303405. ISSN 1541-0048. PMC 5024399. PMID 27626336.
  23. ^ Bassett, Mary T. (January 1, 2016). "Beyond Berets: The Black Panthers as Health Activists". American Journal of Public Health. 106 (10): 1741–1743. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2016.303412. ISSN 1541-0048. PMC 5024403. PMID 27626339.
  24. ^ "The Health/PAC Digital Archive: Three Decades of Health and Social Justice". www.healthpacbulletin.org. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  25. ^ a b Lewontin, Richard (1982). "AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND THE PENETRATION OF CAPITAL" (PDF). Science for the People. 14: 12–17.
  26. ^ a b Uriel Kitron, Brian Schultz (1983). "ALTERNATIVES IN AGRICULTURE" (PDF). Science for the People. 15: 25–30.
  27. ^ a b c Collective, Red Crate (1971). "Help for Science Education in Cuba and Vietnam" (PDF). Science for the People. 3: 28.
  28. ^ Bert Pfeiffer
  29. ^ Pshatne, Mark (1971). "A Scientific Visit to Hanoi" (PDF). Science for the People. 3: 19–23.
  30. ^ Dove, John; et al. (1974). "Book Review: China: Science Walks on Two Legs" (PDF). Science for the People. 6: 19–23.
  31. ^ Michael Harris, Victor Lopez-Tosado (1986). "Science for Nicaragua" (PDF). Science for the People. 18: 22–25.
  32. ^ "Conference 2014 – Science for the People". science-for-the-people.org. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  33. ^ "Science for the People organization website". Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  34. ^ "As scientists prepare to march, Science for the People reboots". Science | AAAS. April 4, 2017. Retrieved April 9, 2018.
  35. ^ a b "Which Way for Science? – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. April 18, 2017. Retrieved March 30, 2018.
  36. ^ a b "National Convention – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  37. ^ Staff, Stateside. "Science for the People, a revived movement of radical scientists, to meet this week in Ann Arbor". Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  38. ^ "SftP Chapters – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  39. ^ "2018 Convention Presentations – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  40. ^ a b "Working groups – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  41. ^ "Which Way for Science? – Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. April 18, 2017. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  42. ^ Atlanta
  43. ^ https://sftp-canada.org/
  44. ^ Washington, D.C.
  45. ^ Western Massachusetts
  46. ^ "Science for the People Magazine – Science for the People is dedicated to building and promoting social movements and political struggles around progressive and radical perspectives on science and society". magazine.scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  47. ^ "Science for the People Magazine – Science for the People". science-for-the-people.org. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  48. ^ "Science for the People Documentary – Science for the People Magazine". magazine.scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  49. ^ Onion, Rebecca. "A Radical '70s-Era Group Is Relaunching to Help Scientists Get Political Under Trump". Slate Magazine. Retrieved September 2, 2018.
  50. ^ "Vol 22-1 The Return of Radical Science – Science for the People Magazine". magazine.scienceforthepeople.org. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  51. ^ a b c Chakradhar, Shraddha. "Science, for the People". Harvard Medical School. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
  52. ^ a b c d e f g h "Preview" (PDF). Science for the People. 17 (3): 2. 1985.
  53. ^ "Richard Lewontin: Race Science for the People". scienceforthepeople.org. August 7, 2021. Retrieved October 12, 2023.
  54. ^ Beckwith, Jon (2002). Making Genes, Making Waves: A Social Activist in Science. Harvard University Press. p. 89. ISBN 9780674020672.
  55. ^ "John Vandermeer | U-M LSA Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB)". lsa.umich.edu. Retrieved August 13, 2018.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Science for the People Discussion List - discussion archives
  • "Towards A Science For The People" - theoretical outline, dated 1972
  • "Science for the People, a revived movement of radical scientists, to meet this week in Ann Arbor" - segment on Michigan Radio's Stateside program, February 1, 2018

science, people, this, article, about, advocacy, organization, radio, show, podcast, podcast, sftp, organization, that, emerged, from, antiwar, culture, united, states, late, 1960s, since, 2014, experienced, revival, focusing, primarily, dual, nature, science,. This article is about Science for the People the advocacy organization For the radio show and podcast see Science for the People podcast Science for the People SftP is an organization that emerged from the antiwar culture of the United States in the late 1960s Since 2014 it has experienced a revival focusing primarily on the dual nature of science The organization advocates for a scientific establishment that is not isolated from society rather one that uses scientific discoveries to advocate for and advance social justice and critically approach science as a social endeavor 1 Contents 1 History 2 Relationship with the scientific establishment 3 Positions and views 3 1 Anti militarism 3 2 Position on nuclear energy 3 3 Views on technology 3 4 Position on science education 3 5 Positions on race and gender 3 6 Criticism of sociobiology 3 7 Positions on healthcare and medicine 3 8 Views on agriculture and ecology 3 9 International relations 4 2014 revitalization 5 2018 National Convention 5 1 Local chapters 6 Magazine 7 Notable members 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editThe original group was composed of professors students workers and other concerned citizens who sought to end potential oppression brought on by pseudoscience or by what it considered the misuse of science SftP generated much controversy in the 1970s for the radical tactics of some of its members Over the initial few years there was an emergence of multiple differing opinions about the nature and mission of SftP should be A faction wanted SftP to pay special attention to scientific issues that support class struggle Another wanted to develop a science for the people The majority however wanted to be the scientific community s critical conscience and expose from within the dangers of the misuse of science After a bitter internal struggle and departure of many the group that remained focused its efforts primarily through its magazine on criticism of scientific misuse During this time it became identified with prominent academic scientists such as Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin 2 Relationship with the scientific establishment editIn the first five years SftP became known in the US scientific community for its attempts at disrupting the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS SftP members considered the AAAS the world s largest association of scientists aligned with the government and the ruling elite SftP particularly decried what it considered AAAS complicity in war sexism racism and capitalism A specific focus of the activists was the scientific community s involvement in the Vietnam war Some of the tactics use to disrupt the AAAS meetings were picketing demonstrations impromptu speeches and confrontational interruptions 3 These actions led to the arrest of several SftP activists in the early 1970s 4 Prior to the formation of SftP and its radical activism against the scientific establishment similar attempts had taken place with other organizations One notable example is University of California Berkeley nuclear physicist Charles Schwartz s 1967 attempt to amend the American Physical Society s APS constitution to allow 1 of members to call for a vote on any social or scientific issue His motion was defeated because APS members did not think the society should take a stance on social issues Another instance is the petition physicists began to the APS not to hold its 1970 meeting in Chicago because of the police brutality at the Democratic National Convention in 1968 The APS Council polled members and upheld its decision to keep the meeting in Chicago 5 In 1971 a proposed amendment to change the APS s mission statement to include the phrase The Society shall shun those activities which are judged to contribute harmfully to the welfare of mankind was defeated 5 In following years thanks to the actions of dedicated activists such as Schwartz and Martin Perl and others APS took certain steps towards social responsibility These included the 1972 creation of the Committee on the Status of Women in Physics 6 the 1979 boycott of states that had not ratified the Equal Rights Amendment ERA and the 1983 Arms Control Resolution 5 The latter was strongly criticized by George Keyworth science advisor to president Ronald Reagan 7 Positions and views editScience for the People has positions in multiple different areas It states on its website that it identifies as part of the broader left 8 Anti militarism edit nbsp Statement by MIT scientists about the anti war protest walkout on March 4 1969From its inception in January 1969 SftP opposed the involvement of scientists in the military SftP also challenged the established notion that organizations such as the American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS and the American Physical Society APS can stay neutral vis a vis the Vietnam war Early on a number of SftP scientists mobilized against US Congress Anti Ballistic Missile ABM Program arguing that the ABM was not feasible and the funds would be better spent on basic scientific research 3 On March 4 1969 MIT scientists staged a mass walkout in protest of the ABM 9 In April 1969 Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action SESPA SftP s predecessor held an orderly march of 250 physicists to the White House to protest the ABM 5 This type of activism among scientists in the US led to the anti ABM treaty of 1972 with the Soviet Union In the 1980s SftP opposed president Reagan s attempt to revive the arms race with the Soviet Union as well as the US involvement in Nicaragua 3 Position on nuclear energy edit In the mid 70s SftP cautioned against the ways that nuclear power was being promoted as a safe and environmentally clean alternative to coal 3 In May 1976 the organization published a pamphlet arguing that the push for nuclear energy in the US over solar and other cleaner cheaper alternatives benefitted the Atomic Industrial complex and not the general public 10 In the 1980s especially in the wake of such disasters as Three Mile Island SftP questioned the environmental safety of nuclear energy and the toxic waste it produces 11 12 Views on technology edit Throughout the 1970s and 1980s SftP considered technology an important outcome of scientific advancement 3 The organization favored the more concrete nature of technological developments over purely intellectual exercise of theoretical science 3 Key to the group s support for technology was the conviction that it should neither replace humans in the workplace nor harm the environment 13 SftP members advocated for research and development programs to be chosen based on equity and social need and not to meet the government s needs of economic and military security 14 Position on science education edit One of the core tenets of the SftP was that science and particularly biology and medicine cannot remain neutral The organization not only believed that these disciplines should focus on correcting societal ills they also actively participated in educating people on work place hazards such as asbestos and other chemical and environmental exposures 3 In the early 1970s a Boston several SftP members known as the Boston Science Teaching Group published and distributed series of pamphlets on topics such as genetics and ecology Other members who were professional educators volunteered to teach biology in Boston s underserved school districts In 1971 two university professors Rita Arditti and Tom Strunk in an attempt to reform college biology curriculum created a socially conscious first year college course called Objecting to Objectivity A Course in Biology The course covered genetic engineering physical and social limitations and implications of human gene maps polygenic inheritance and prenatal diagnosis It also discussed reproduction birth control and abortion including the contemporary research and public policies about reproductive health Other topics included population growth and Malthusian and Marxist theories and ethics of human research 3 Positions on race and gender edit Advocating for racial and gender equality in science and medicine was one of the core tenets of SftP 3 The organization included multiple feminist members who were pioneering women in science 3 These included Arditti and other biologists such as Anne Fausto Sterling 15 Freda Friedman Salzman 16 Ruth Hubbard 17 and author and activist Barbara Beckwith Hubbard for instance was the first woman to attain tenure in biology at Harvard University 17 SftP also embraced the cause of gender equality in the society at large and advocated for reproductive rights gender equality at the workplace and addressed issues surrounding sexuality 3 It also fought against domestic violence and traditional gender roles in family structure 3 While focusing on the world of science feminist members of SftP faced an uphill battle in introducing gender parity for women in science at the universities 3 They also sought to change the discriminatory gender dynamics in academia and in laboratories 3 SftP s efforts at promoting gender equality were paralleled with its efforts to promote racial and ethnic equality 3 Although made up primarily of white Americans some SftP members maintained relations with the Black Panther Party 3 The two organizations urged the scientific community to create a free science program for black communities to enhance their scientific knowledge The organization also criticized attacks on affirmative action and featured pieces by black and other minority scientists in its publication 3 It also uncovered occupational health hazards among black and ethnic minority workers both in the US and abroad and fought to improve workplace conditions to eliminate these risks 3 SftP s antiracist ideology put it at odds with the concepts of sociobiology and genetic determinism 3 Criticism of sociobiology edit Biologists within SftP were highly critical of sociobiology because of objectionable premises to the organization of the discipline and for the implications of using sociobiology to support racism capitalism and imperialism 18 E O Wilson a biologist and entomology professor in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University whose 1975 book Sociobiology The New Synthesis had helped start the debate wrote that the political objections forcefully made by the Sociobiology Study Group of Science for the People in particular took me by surprise 19 SftP condemned the 1969 arguments that genetic differences were the underlying reason for differences in educational achievements between blacks and whites 20 SftP also took issue with the Harvard XYY study in 1975 20 The goal of the XYY study was to assess the risk of criminality the extra Y chromosome supposedly conferred 20 The SftP scientists pointed out the ethical and methodological failures of the above study including open ended consents stigmatization of individuals with XYY lack of controls and absence of double blinding 20 Positions on healthcare and medicine edit Health care providers who were SftP members worked to strengthen healthcare infrastructure in underserved communities They partnered with both the Black Panthers and Young Lords Organization to bring medical services to minorities who often could not access the medical establishment both as practitioners and as patients 21 22 23 SftP joined with other New Left Health organizations such as Health Policy Advisory Center and Medical Committee for Human Rights fought for a fair and just healthcare system and advocated for women s reproductive rights 24 SftP members such as cancer researcher John Valentine at Wayne State University exposed the capitalist interests that drove biomedical research He argued that the 1971 National Cancer Act signed by president Richard Nixon failed to fund research into cancer causes such as poor preventative healthcare occupational hazards and environmental exposures He also criticized the use of public funds only to develop new chemotherapeutic agents instead of using some of it to minimize cancer risk due to workplace exposures and cancer causing consumer products 3 SftP biologists also opposed recombinant DNA rDNA research before its public health and environmental impact can be thoroughly elucidated They also expressed concerns and accurately predicted that rDNA can commercialize biomedical research and make it a market commodity They urged the scientific community and the general public to consider who decides what research gets done and who benefits from these decisions 3 Views on agriculture and ecology edit SftP argued that the existing contemporary agricultural models were neither benefitting the consumer as food prices were rising astronomically nor the farmer because their increasing debt without a raise in income 25 The primary benefiters were input and output capital enterprises such has fertilizer companies insecticide and herbicide manufacturers and farm machinery companies 25 Members of the SftP formed the New World Agriculture Group NWAG that attempted to discover and develop ecologically rational alternative agricultural methods Methods that protected the environment and preserved long term productive capacity 26 NWAG also proposed partnering with farm labor organizations to help bring an end to worker exploitation and the unequal wealth distribution 26 International relations edit From its inception SftP condemned the use of technology and science to oppress and colonize other countries 27 The organization gave the examples of both Vietnam and Cuba where it stated the US technological and scientific superiority was being used to both militarily and economically repress the smaller nations 27 In response to the US policy in 1971 a group of SftP members in Cambridge Massachusetts collected and shipped large amounts of scientific books and journals to Vietnam and Cuba to aid in science education there 27 The same year molecular biologist Dr Mark Ptashne and zoologist Dr Bert Pfeiffer 28 went to Hanoi and lectured to Vietnamese scientists and physicians 29 There were also successful efforts of networking with scientists in China 30 and in the 1980s with the scientific and technological community in Nicaragua 31 2014 revitalization editSince the fall of 2014 an effort to revive and reorganize SftP has been underway The SftP revitalization efforts emerged from the convention held April 11 13 2014 at the University of Massachusetts Amherst 18 At the 2014 conference various topics including the history of the SftP health care climate change social justice science education gender and racial bias and militarization of science were discussed 32 Since then inspired by the original 1970s 1980s group this new formation has dedicated itself to building a social movement around progressive and radical perspectives on science and society 33 Several local chapters of the SftP participated in the first annual March for Science on April 22 2017 34 The revived SftP also published a statement titled Which Way for Science 35 The statement hailed the March for Science as an exciting first step but it also criticized the apolitical nature of the event and for their lack of attention to the experiences of scientists from historically marginalized groups such as women people of color and others Which Way for Science called attention to science s historic ties to U S capitalism and militarism and called for a radical shift in its practice 35 2018 National Convention editThe national convention held at the University of Michigan s Ann Arbor campus in February 2018 brought together close to one hundred scientists and activists to formalize the group s bylaws and structure 36 37 During the three days the attendees discussed the history and future of SftP heard from local chapters that included representatives from Atlanta Mexico City New York and seven other North American locations 38 The organizational structure of SftP was explored and these discussions served as a guide to developing an inclusive radical and democratic political movement for scientists and STEM workers 36 There were a dozen presentations on variety of topics related to SftP s mission 39 In addition to the call to organize more local chapters a number of working groups was also developed during the meeting 40 These included groups dealing with Climate Change Reproductive Justice Science education and others 40 Plans to participate in the second annual March for Science on April 14 2018 were also initiated at the convention 41 Local chapters edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Science for the People news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ann Arbor Atlanta 42 Boston Canada 43 Knoxville Madison Mexico City New York City Urbana Champaign Washington D C 44 Western Massachusetts 45 Twin CitiesMagazine editFrom 1969 to 1989 the original SftP published a quarterly then bimonthly magazine that has been digitized and available on the organization s website 46 On July 28 2018 at Caveat in New York City the publication was relaunched online with a special issue dedicated to geo engineering 47 The event also featured the premiere of a documentary on the organization 48 49 The first regular issue of the relaunched magazine was published online and in print on May 1 2019 50 Notable members editSee also Sociobiology Study Group Jon Beckwith 51 Chandler Davis 18 Anne Fausto Sterling 18 Douglas J Futuyma 52 Stephen Jay Gould 51 Joseph L Graves Jr 53 William A Haseltine 52 David Himmelstein 52 Ruth Hubbard 17 Richard Levins 18 Richard Lewontin 51 Karen Messing 52 David F Noble 52 Alvin Francis Poussaint 52 James A Shapiro 54 John Vandermeer 55 Joseph Weizenbaum 52 Steffie Woolhandler 52 See also editScience Wars Evolutionary psychology controversy New World Agriculture and Ecology GroupReferences edit The Dual Nature of Science Science for the People scienceforthepeople org April 12 2018 Retrieved April 14 2018 Greetings from the past Science for the People Science for the People September 28 2007 Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved April 14 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Schmalzer Sigrid Chard Daniel S Botelho Alyssa 2018 Science for the people documents from America s movement of radical scientists Schmalzer Sigrid Chard Daniel S Botelho Alyssa Amherst ISBN 9781625343185 OCLC 1015275127 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Arrests Names PDF science for the people org January 3 1973 Archived PDF from the original on August 10 2022 Retrieved June 15 2023 a b c d Consciousness Raising Retrieved April 29 2018 Committee on the Status of Women in Physics Science Policy Colorado University May 2009 PDF The Dual Nature of Science Science for the People April 12 2018 Suiter Greta LibGuides March 4 Scientists Students and Society Archival Collections libguides mit edu Retrieved April 29 2018 SfrP May 1976 Issue PDF Cina C and T Goldfarb Three Mile Island and Nuclear Power Science for the People 1979 11 4 10 17 Brown L Allen D Toxic Waste and Citizen Action PDF Science for the People 15 6 13 New Robotics PDF Dickson David Choosing Technology PDF Science for the People 19 6 10 Gender amp Sexuality Dr Anne Fausto Sterling Dr Anne Fausto Sterling Retrieved May 18 2018 Freda Friedman Salzman a b c Ruth Hubbard and the evolution of biology Science AAAS October 5 2016 Retrieved May 18 2018 a b c d e Science for the People The 1970s and Today Retrieved April 13 2014 Archived copy Archived from the original on June 18 2006 Retrieved June 17 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b c d Richardson Sarah S November 6 2013 Sex itself the search for male and female in the human genome Chicago ISBN 978 0226084688 OCLC 840937252 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ten Point Health Program of the Young Lords www2 iath virginia edu Retrieved May 6 2018 Morabia Alfredo January 1 2016 Unveiling the Black Panther Party Legacy to Public Health American Journal of Public Health 106 10 1732 1733 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2016 303405 ISSN 1541 0048 PMC 5024399 PMID 27626336 Bassett Mary T January 1 2016 Beyond Berets The Black Panthers as Health Activists American Journal of Public Health 106 10 1741 1743 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2016 303412 ISSN 1541 0048 PMC 5024403 PMID 27626339 The Health PAC Digital Archive Three Decades of Health and Social Justice www healthpacbulletin org Retrieved May 6 2018 a b Lewontin Richard 1982 AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AND THE PENETRATION OF CAPITAL PDF Science for the People 14 12 17 a b Uriel Kitron Brian Schultz 1983 ALTERNATIVES IN AGRICULTURE PDF Science for the People 15 25 30 a b c Collective Red Crate 1971 Help for Science Education in Cuba and Vietnam PDF Science for the People 3 28 Bert Pfeiffer Pshatne Mark 1971 A Scientific Visit to Hanoi PDF Science for the People 3 19 23 Dove John et al 1974 Book Review China Science Walks on Two Legs PDF Science for the People 6 19 23 Michael Harris Victor Lopez Tosado 1986 Science for Nicaragua PDF Science for the People 18 22 25 Conference 2014 Science for the People science for the people org Retrieved April 9 2018 Science for the People organization website Retrieved February 16 2017 As scientists prepare to march Science for the People reboots Science AAAS April 4 2017 Retrieved April 9 2018 a b Which Way for Science Science for the People scienceforthepeople org April 18 2017 Retrieved March 30 2018 a b National Convention Science for the People scienceforthepeople org Retrieved April 1 2018 Staff Stateside Science for the People a revived movement of radical scientists to meet this week in Ann Arbor Retrieved April 1 2018 SftP Chapters Science for the People scienceforthepeople org Retrieved April 1 2018 2018 Convention Presentations Science for the People scienceforthepeople org Retrieved April 1 2018 a b Working groups Science for the People scienceforthepeople org Retrieved April 1 2018 Which Way for Science Science for the People scienceforthepeople org April 18 2017 Retrieved April 1 2018 Atlanta https sftp canada org Washington D C Western Massachusetts Science for the People Magazine Science for the People is dedicated to building and promoting social movements and political struggles around progressive and radical perspectives on science and society magazine scienceforthepeople org Retrieved September 2 2018 Science for the People Magazine Science for the People science for the people org Retrieved April 10 2018 Science for the People Documentary Science for the People Magazine magazine scienceforthepeople org Retrieved September 2 2018 Onion Rebecca A Radical 70s Era Group Is Relaunching to Help Scientists Get Political Under Trump Slate Magazine Retrieved September 2 2018 Vol 22 1 The Return of Radical Science Science for the People Magazine magazine scienceforthepeople org Retrieved May 2 2019 a b c Chakradhar Shraddha Science for the People Harvard Medical School Retrieved April 13 2014 a b c d e f g h Preview PDF Science for the People 17 3 2 1985 Richard Lewontin Race Science for the People scienceforthepeople org August 7 2021 Retrieved October 12 2023 Beckwith Jon 2002 Making Genes Making Waves A Social Activist in Science Harvard University Press p 89 ISBN 9780674020672 John Vandermeer U M LSA Ecology and Evolutionary Biology EEB lsa umich edu Retrieved August 13 2018 External links editOfficial website Science for the People Discussion List discussion archives Towards A Science For The People theoretical outline dated 1972 Science for the People a revived movement of radical scientists to meet this week in Ann Arbor segment on Michigan Radio s Stateside program February 1 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Science for the People amp oldid 1207129517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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