Support Science for the People Volume 23, number 1, Science Under Occupation Science for the People is an organization of scientists, workers, educators, and activists dedicated to building a bottom-up social movement around progressive...
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Letter from the Editors Volume 23, number 1, Science Under Occupation History is full of stories of subjugation, oppression, and occupation—stories that have been rewritten, sanitized, or removed from mainstream narratives altogether. But...
Masthead Volume 23, number 1, Science Under Occupation SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPLE is dedicated to building and promoting social movements and political struggles around progressive and radical perspectives on science and society. We are...
Hilary Rose, a sociologist, and Steven Rose, a neuroscientist, were two of the principal founders of the British Society for Social Responsibility in Science (BSSRS) in the late 1960s in London. BSSRS was linked to radical science...
Progressive and radical organizations must rise to meet the immediate challenges of these crises, while also working to replace the failing systems that gave rise to them. We must practice solidarity by aiding impacted communities and by...
Science for the People is proud to introduce our two inaugural Circle Holders, Rochelle Gutiérrez and Max Liboiron. Circle Holder is an honor granted to individuals and groups whose work at the intersection of power, ideology, and equity...
Biological essentialism and reductionism have plagued how we scientists do science, and how society looks at the science we do, for a very long time. Biological essentialism refers to the idea that who we are is purely innate, a hardwired...
A Guide to Action for Advocates of the Green New Deal A Review of Creating an Ecological Society: Toward a Revolutionary Transformation By Jamie Bemis Volume 22, number 2, Envisioning and Enacting the Science We Need Creating an Ecological...
Growing up, there was a globe on my family’s living room table. My brother and I would play “vacation,” spinning the globe and dragging our fingers along the rotating lines of latitude. Wherever our fingers pointed when the globe stopped...
Where did the 1970s radical science movement begin? Some may say it started in a grand conference hall, where Nobel Prize winner Maurice Wilkins declared that science was in a state of crisis.