- Change for America on Science and Tech Policy: Part 1
- Taking a Short Break
- Transition Team Deploys Its First Public Web 2.0 Tools
- Victory for Stem Cells in Michigan
- White Open Spaces
- Historical Election Maps and Open Mapping Research
- Scary Regulatory Maneuvers in Bush’s Last Days
- FDA Did Not Finish Its Homework On BPA
- Digital Freedom of Expression and Human Rights
- Traumatic Brain Injury and Helmet Design
- Gates Foundation Funds Research, Venture Capital Style
- A Brief History of Lead Regulation
End-of-the-Week Links
At NRDC’s Switchboard, Scott Dodd on recent studies of the health impacts of climate change.
Bioethics meets voting technology: Summer Johnson grabs a story on blog.bioethics.net on how mobile voting machines could empower those who cannot commute to a polling station.
Nat Torkington has thoughts on better tools for teaching evolution in high school science classes at O’Reilly Radar.
Sheril Kirshenbaum at Next Generation Energy dreams of New York…with wind turbines.
Center for American Progress Fellow Bob Sussman has a three part series on the Clean Air Interstate Rule and how to rebuild clean air policy.
Over at social-networking megasite Mashable, Paul Glazowski discovers scivee.tv, a new site that integrates scientific posters and papers with video commentary from researchers.
Liz Borkowski picks up news that California is taking product safety rules into its own hands with a Green Chemistry Initiative, over at The Pump Handle.
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