Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Schleifer, David
and
Penders, Bart
2011.
Food, Drugs, and TV.
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 6,
p.
431.
Penders, Bart
2011.
Cool and Safe.
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 6,
p.
472.
Schleifer, David
2011.
We Spent a Million Bucks and Then We Had To Do Something.
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 6,
p.
460.
Flipse, Steven M.
and
Osseweijer, Patricia
2013.
Media attention to GM food cases: An innovation perspective.
Public Understanding of Science,
Vol. 22,
Issue. 2,
p.
185.
Penders, Bart
2014.
Mythbusters: Credibilising strategies in popular nutrition books by academics.
Public Understanding of Science,
Vol. 23,
Issue. 8,
p.
903.
Ringsberg, Henrik
2014.
Perspectives on food traceability: a systematic literature review.
Supply Chain Management: An International Journal,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 5/6,
p.
558.
van Rijswoud, Erwin
2014.
Shifting Expert Configurations and the Public Credibility of Science: Boundary Work and Identity Work of Hydraulic Engineers (1980–2009).
Science in Context,
Vol. 27,
Issue. 3,
p.
531.
Zwart, Hub
Landeweerd, Laurens
and
van Rooij, Arjan
2014.
Adapt or perish? Assessing the recent shift in the European research funding arena from ‘ELSA’ to ‘RRI’.
Life Sciences, Society and Policy,
Vol. 10,
Issue. 1,
Shapira, Reuven
2015.
Power Elitess Interests and Biased Social Science: 64 Years of Telling Kibbutz Half Truths.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Shapira, Reuven
2015.
Power Elitess Interests and Biased Social Science: 64 Years of Telling Kibbutz Half Truth.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Fochler, Maximilian
2016.
Variants of Epistemic Capitalism.
Science, Technology, & Human Values,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 5,
p.
922.
Weishaar, Heide
Dorfman, Lori
Freudenberg, Nicholas
Hawkins, Benjamin
Smith, Katherine
Razum, Oliver
and
Hilton, Shona
2016.
Why media representations of corporations matter for public health policy: a scoping review.
BMC Public Health,
Vol. 16,
Issue. 1,
Shapira, Reuven
2016.
Co-Opted Biased Social Science: 64 Years of Telling Half Truths about the Kibbutz.
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol. 04,
Issue. 06,
p.
17.
Leenen, Melanie
and
Penders, Bart
2016.
Dissident Dietary Credibility.
Science Communication,
Vol. 38,
Issue. 5,
p.
551.
Penders, Bart
2017.
All for one or one for all? Authorship and the cross-sectoral valuation of credit in nutrition science.
Accountability in Research,
Vol. 24,
Issue. 8,
p.
433.
Camerani, Roberto
Rotolo, Daniele
and
Grassano, Nicola
2018.
Do Firms Publish? A Multi-Sectoral Analysis.
SSRN Electronic Journal,
Freudenberg, Nicholas
2018.
ToxicDocs: a new resource for assessing the impact of corporate practices on health.
Journal of Public Health Policy,
Vol. 39,
Issue. 1,
p.
30.
Hendrickx, Kim
2019.
The Political Space between Words and Things: Health Claims as Referential Displacement.
Science as Culture,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 4,
p.
427.
Anyshchenko, Artem
2019.
The Precautionary Principle in EU Regulation of GMOs: Socio-Economic Considerations and Ethical Implications of Biotechnology.
Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics,
Vol. 32,
Issue. 5-6,
p.
855.
Marks, Jonathan H.
2020.
Beyond Disclosure: Developing Law and Policy to Tackle Corporate Influence.
American Journal of Law & Medicine,
Vol. 46,
Issue. 2-3,
p.
275.