Shanthi Chandrasekar, Kolam – Aishwarya (Earth), 2018, acrylic on canvas, 40 x 30 inches.

Weaving Data and Community

There are big, open questions about the changing relationship between science and society: How should the public fund science, and what kind of science should it fund? What should society expect in return for its support? What is the role of research universities in the scientific ecosystem? And the relationship between science and society looks very different at the local, or even personal, level—and the questions are different too: How can research improve the quality of life in my community? Should I be worried about the refinery in my neighborhood? Is my town able to assist the most vulnerable when the power goes out during a storm? The essays in the Spring 2026 Issues explore all these questions to better understand how the social contract with science is evolving.

Editor's Journal

  • Mohole Moments

    A “mohole moment” is when an investment in science goes disastrously wrong, providing a focal point for distrust and funding cuts. Such moments reveal the tacit premise of science’s social contract—both what the agreement is and what counts as a breach.

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Perspectives

Poetry

Real Numbers

Features

Book Reviews

  • Making Our Beasts by Elana Shever

    Dinomania

    Max Dresow examines a recent book about about the history and practice of dinosaur paleontology in the United States, the discipline’s role in America’s westward expansion, and the problematic aspects of dinosaur-centered “edutainment.”

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  • Diabled Power by Angela Frederick

    Same Storm, Different Boats

    Adam Briggle examines how disasters can disproportionately affect vulnerable people in his review of Angela Frederick’s Disabled Power.

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  • Riverine Dreams by George Frazier

    Roving the Prairies

    Charles N. Herrick navigates the science and art of American grassland restoration in his review of George Frazier’s Riverine Dream.

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