
Bending Science: How Special Interests Corrupt Public Health Research
Thomas O. McGarity
What do we know about the possible poisons that industrial technologies leave in our air and water? How reliable is the science that federal regulators and legislators use to protect the public from dangerous products? As this disturbing book shows, ideological or economic attacks on research are part of an extensive pattern of abuse.
Thomas O. McGarity and Wendy E. Wagner reveal the range of sophisticated legal and financial tactics political and corporate advocates use to discredit or suppress research on potential human health hazards. Scientists can find their research blocked, or find themselves threatened with financial ruin. Corporations, plaintiff attorneys, think tanks, even government agencies have been caught suppressing or distorting research on the safety of chemical products.
With alarming stories drawn from the public record, McGarity and Wagner describe how advocates attempt to bend science or “spin” findings. They reveal an immense range of tools available to shrewd partisans determined to manipulate research.
Bending Science exposes an astonishing pattern of corruption and makes a compelling case for reforms to safeguard both the integrity of science and the public health.
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About Thomas O. McGarity
Reviews for Bending Science: How Special Interests Corrupt Public Health Research
Maura Pilotti
Metapsychology
Bending Science is so chock-full of ideas and insights… McGarity and Wagner’s insight has large implications both for potential legal reforms and for public faith in the integrity of the scientific process… Bending Science is an immensely important book. It is one of quite a large number of books published recently on the manipulations of science by interest groups and the government. Yet even in this crowded field, Bending Science stakes out its own ground and makes an invaluable contribution to the debate over the role of science in public policy.
Lisa Heinzerling
Texas Law Journal
Drawing together a host of little-known but dramatic cases, this landmark book documents more comprehensively than any previous study, what has been suspected for years: how extensively scientific data are misused and abused in regulatory and tort law. Society depends on science to guide public policy on health and safety, but as McGarity and Wagner show, many interest groups do all they can to influence—and undermine—independent and honest research. Bending Science shows just how far science has been corrupted, and offers a road to reform.
Carl F. Cranor, author of Toxic Torts: Science, Law, and the Possibility of Justice Thanks to extraordinary detective work into both law and science, Bending Science makes a compelling case that the system of policy-relevant science has gone badly off the tracks, and that law is both part of the problem and the solution. Powerful but not polemical, McGarity and Wagner show groups of all political stripes, and the government itself, have misrepresented and manipulated science.
Lisa Heinzerling, coauthor of Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing