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460 results on '"Macilwain, Colin"'

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1. Scientists should not resign themselves to Brexit

2. AIDS: On the Brink

3. Head to head

4. Access issues may determine whether agri-biotech will help the world's poor

5. Time to cry out for academic freedom

6. When rhetoric hits reality in debate on bioprospecting

7. Is magnetic fusion heading for ignition or meltdown?

8. Watching science at work: a network of social scientists in the United Kingdom is seeking better ways to study the work of biologists. But, asks Colin Macilwain, can it earn its subjects' trust?

9. Out of sight, out of mind?

10. Nanotech thinks big

11. Collapse of real sharpens Brazil's contrasts

12. Museum research comes off list of endangered species: Natural history museums are shaking off their dusty image in a bid to show relevance to contemporary concerns

13. Campuses ring to a stormy clash over truth and reason

14. Science seeks weapons clean-up role

15. Market watch

16. Market watch

17. Museums: Workshop of the world

18. Workshop of the world: Colin Macilwain talks to the curators of the National Museum of Scotland on the eve of a grand expansion

19. The elephant in the room we can't ignore: if Donald Trump were to trigger a crisis in Western democracy, scientists would need to look at their part in its downfall

20. Stimulus-response: the United States' 2009 financial stimulus bill has provided research with breathing space, rather than the sharp shot in the arm that many anticipated

21. Supergrid: is a vast undersea grid bringing wind-generated electricity from the North Sea to Europe a feasible proposition or an overpriced fantasy?

22. Rejection of GM crops is not a failure for science: governments maintaining their antipathy for transgenic crops are sensibly balancing public consent with scientific evidence

23. The future of science will soon be upon us: the European Commission has abandoned consideration of 'Science 2.0', finding it too ambitious. That was the wrong call

24. Change the cancer conversation

25. And the winner is: not science

26. And the winner is: not science; portrayals of science in the cinema are growing in sophistication--but not exactly at the speed of light

27. Economic divide taking toll on European science: the horizon 2020 programme threatens to siphon away the best scientists from southern Europe, argues

28. Bush's climate plan 'nothing new'

29. Safe and sound?

30. US scientists fight political meddling

31. Organic: Is it the future of farming?

32. Chinese agribiotech: Against the grain

33. Europe needs a research leader who will lead: the next research commissioner for the European Union will need the drive and confidence to clear a daunting in-tray, argues

34. Beware of backroom deals in the name of 'science'

35. Beware of backroom deals in the name of 'science': the term 'sound science' has become Orwellian double- speak for various forms of pro-business spin

36. Wanted: Fraud-buster with political antennae

37. Wanted: fraud-buster with political antennae: a mild-mannered man's fiery resignation leaves a troubling vacancy at the world's largest office for investigating scientific fraud

38. Emerging powers need a more-inclusive science: fast-growing economies can learn from the West's mistakes and couple social and 'hard' sciences to address their own societal needs

39. The rise of the bean counters

40. Thrill of space exploration is a universal constant: in the film Gravity, Sandra Bullock plays Everywoman, and reminds Colin Macilwain how inspiring science and discovery still can be

41. The big picture: Science in a changed world

42. Hughes institute will put down roots to develop research tools

43. US considers moves to relieve morale crisis at energy labs

44. A springboard to success

45. Large research facilities to lose out in science spending spree?

46. World leaders heap praise on human genome landmark

47. Biologists challenge sequencers on parasite genome publication

48. Canada's plans for neutrons stall

49. Budget crisis forces hard choices on US high-energy physics

50. Charm, not tact, aided pioneer in fight for physics

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