Duke Law School
Duke Law Journal



LAW AND CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS






Volume 69 Summer 2006 Number 3



Sequestered Science: The Consequences of Undisclosed Knowledge

David Michaels and Neil Vidmar
Special Editors














Foreword: Sarbanes-Oxley for Science David Michaels 1






Transparency in Public Science: Purposes, Reasons, Limits Sheila Jasonoff 21






Scientific Secrecy and "Spin": The Sad, Sleazy Saga of the Trials of Remune Susan Haack 47






Transparency and Innuendo: An Alternative to Reactive Over-Disclosure Scott M. Lassman 69






Sometimes the Silence Can Be like the Thunder: Access to Pharmaceutical Data at the FDA Peter Lurie
and Allison Zieve
85






The People's Agent: Executive Branch Secrecy and Accountability in an Age of Terrorism Sidney A. Shapiro
and Rena I. Steinzor
99






Public Health Versus Court-Sponsored Secrecy Daniel J. Givelber
and Anthony Robbins
131






Open Secrets: The Widespread Availability of Information About the Health and Environmental Effects of Chemicals James W. Conrad Jr. 141






Why We Need Global Standards for Corporate Disclosure Allen L. White 167