Opioids. Concussions. Obesity. Climate change.

America is a country of everyday crises -- big, long-spanning problems that persist, mostly unregulated, despite their toll on the country's health and vitality. And for...

Buy Now From Amazon

Opioids. Concussions. Obesity. Climate change.

America is a country of everyday crises -- big, long-spanning problems that persist, mostly unregulated, despite their toll on the country's health and vitality. And for every case of government inaction on one of these issues, there is a set of familiar, doubtful refrains: The science is unclear. The data is inconclusive. Regulation is unjustified. It's a slippery slope.

Is it?

The Triumph of Doubt traces the ascendance of science-for-hire in American life and government, from its origins in the tobacco industry in the 1950s to its current manifestations across government, public policy, and even professional sports. Well-heeled American corporations have long had a financial stake in undermining scientific consensus and manufacturing uncertainty; in The Triumph of Doubt, former Obama and Clinton official David Michaels details how bad science becomes public policy -- and where it's happening today.

Amid fraught conversations of "alternative facts" and "truth decay," The Triumph of Doubt wields its unprecedented access to shine a light on the machinations and scope of manipulated science in American society. It is an urgent, revelatory work, one that promises to reorient conversations around science and the public good for the foreseeable future.


Similar Products

Doubt is Their Product: How Industry's Assault on Science Threatens Your HealthThe PhlebotomistKochland: The Secret History of Koch Industries and Corporate Power in AmericaWhy Trust Science? (University Center for Human Values Series)AmazonBasics 3 Ring Binder Dividers with 8 Tabs, Pack of 6 SetsMerchants of Doubt: How a Handful of Scientists Obscured the Truth on Issues from Tobacco Smoke to Climate ChangeGood Economics for Hard TimesExposure: Poisoned Water, Corporate Greed, and One Lawyer's Twenty-Year Battle against DuPont