Daniel Lee Kleinman-1-
July 2017
DANIEL LEE KLEINMAN
Office of the Provost
Boston University
1 Silber Way
8th Floor
Boston, MA 02215
617.358.8737
mobile: 608.469.6111
CITIZENSHIP: United States
EDUCATION
GraduateUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison
Degree: Ph.D., December 1992
Field: Sociology
Degree: Master of Science, 1986
Field: Sociology
Undergraduate Haverford College, Haverford, PA
Degree: Bachelor of Arts, 1982
Major: Social History
University College London
Junior Year, 1980-81
Area of Concentration: History
EMPLOYMENT
January 2017-Office of the Provost
Boston University
Position: Associate Provost for Graduate Affairs
January 2017-Department of Sociology
Boston University
Position: Professor
April-December 2016The Graduate School, University of Wisconsin—Madison
Position: Senior Associate Dean
August 2014-April 2016The Graduate School, University of Wisconsin—Madison
Position: Associate Dean of the Graduate School
August 2012-August 2014The Graduate School, University of Wisconsin—Madison
Position: Associate Dean for Social Studies
July 2008-June 2012Department of Community & Environmental Sociology
University of Wisconsin—Madison
Position: Chair
July 2007-June 2012Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies
University of Wisconsin—Madison
Position: Director
August 2000-December 2016Department of Community & Environmental Sociology
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Positions: From Associate to Professor (2005)
July 1994-School of History, Technology, and Society
August 2000 Georgia Institute of Technology
Positions: Assistant to Associate Professor (1999)
August 1993-School of Human Sciences and Humanities
June 1994 University of Houston--Clear Lake
Position: Assistant Professor
HONORS/ RESEARCH SUPPORT
2013-16 National Science, Foundation, “A Transdisciplinary Deliberative Model for Just Research and Policy: Toward Resolving the Crisis of Vanishing Insect Pollinators, $300,000
2012Star-Nelkin Paper Award, Science, Knowledge, and
Technology, American Sociological Association,
Co-winner with Kelly Moore, Scott Frickel, and
David Hess
2012International Scholar, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, Korea
2012-2014National Science Foundation, “Understanding Innovative
Science,” with Co-PIs with Greg Downey and Noah
Feinstein, $325,000
2012-2013Graduate School, University of Wisconsin—Madison,
“Understanding Innovative Science,” Co-PI with
Greg Downey and Noah Feinstein, Declined
2010-2012National Science Foundation, “Trading Codes between
Industry and Academia,” $103,000
2010-2011Graduate School, University of Wisconsin Madison,
“Understanding Innovative Science,” Co-PIs: Greg
Downey, Noah Feinstein, and Linda Hogle,$40,000
2009-2012National Science Foundation, “Finding Sustainable
SolutionstoHoney Bee Health,” $240,000
2008-9Buttel-Sewell Professorship, Department of Rural
Sociology,University of Wisconsin--Madison
2008-9College of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-
-Madison, “Enhancing Liberal Studies for
Engineering Students, Co-PI with Jeffrey Russell,
$31,000
2007-8Fellowship, Committee on Institutional Cooperation-
Academic Leadership Program
2006-8Vilas Associate Award, Arts and Humanities Division,
Graduate School, University of Wisconsin.
Approximately: $75,000.
2005-7National Science Foundation, Postdoctoral Fellowship in
Science and Society, Co-PI with Jason Delborne,
$84,000
2006Graduate School, University of Wisconsin, Research Grant.
“Disease and Discipline: The Formation,
Solidification, and Development of Plant Pathology
in the United States.” $17,834 (withdrawn in favor
of Vilas Associate Award).
2003-2006Hatch Grant (USDA/ University of Wisconsin, CALS)
“Where is the Social in the Regulation of Agricultural Biotechnology? A Comparison of the US, Europe and the Cartagena Biosafety Protocols.” $70,000 (approximate).
2004Brittingham Fund. “Communicating Science Beyond the
University.” Jo Handelsman, co-PI.. $15,000.
2003Brittingham Fund. Yearbook of Science and Technology in
Society. Robert Mandel and Jo Handelsman, co-
PIs. $20,000.
2003Graduate School, University of Wisconsin, Research Grant.
“From Biotechnology to the Internet: Interrogating Technoscience in the 21st Century.” $8,196.
2002Graduate School, University of Wisconsin, Research Grant.
“Science is Political/ Technology is Social:
Interrogating Technoscience in the 21st Century.”
$7,667.
2001-03Meiklejohn-Powell Fellowship, Integrated Liberal
StudiesProgram, University of Wisconsin–
Madison.$5,000.
2001-03Fund for the Advancement of the Discipline, ASA/ NSF
Small Grants Program. “The Social Organization
Of the Knowledge Economy: The Case of Bio-
Technology” (Co-PI with Steven Vallas). $5,000.
2001-02Graduate School, University of Wisconsin, Research Grant.
“The Changing Social Organization of Knowledge
Work.” $7,872.
2000-02Hatch Grant (USDA/ University of Wisconsin, CALS)
“Citizenship and the Knowledge Economy.”
$44,000.
1998Life Member, Clare Hall, Cambridge University
1998Visiting Fellow, Clare Hall, Cambridge University
1998John Adams Fellowship, Institute of United States Studies,
University of London (declined).
1997-8National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for
University Teachers. $30,000.
1997-8American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship.
$20,000 (declined).
1996-7Georgia Tech Foundation Research Grant.
1993Katherine DuPre Lumpkin Dissertation Prize, presented
by the Department of Sociology, University of
Wisconsin for the best doctoral dissertation
1992Hacker-Mullins Award (honorable mention), presented by the Science, Knowledge and Technology Section
of the ASA for an outstanding scholarly
contribution to science and technology studies.
Daniel Lee Kleinman-1-
1991-92Dean's Fellowship, University of Wisconsin.
1991-92Editorial Intern, American Sociological Review.
1990-91National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement
Award.
1990-91University of Wisconsin Dissertation Fellowship.
1990Hagley Museum and Library Research Grant.
1990University of Wisconsin Domestic Travel Fellowship.
1990A.H. Kolb Award for Academic Achievement.
1989-90Vilas Fellowship, University of Wisconsin.
1989Distinction--Oral Preliminary Examination.
WORK-IN-PROGRESS
1) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Sigrid Peterson, Noah Weeth Feinstein, Greg Downey, and Chisato Fukuda. “Building Hybrid Higher Education: General Trends and Local Factors at the Academic-Business Boundary.” 53 manuscript pages.
BOOKS
1)Suryanarayanan, Sainath and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2017. Vanishing Bees: Science, Politics and Honey Bee Health. New Brunswick, NJ:
Rutgers University Press. Expected release: November.
2) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Kelly Moore (editors).
2014.Handbook of Science, Technology, and Society. London: Routledge.
3) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Karen Cloud-Hansen, Jo Handelsman (editors).
2014. Controversy in Science and Technology. Volume 4. New York: Oxford University Press.
4) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Jason Delborne, Karen Cloud-Hansen, and Jo Handelsman (eds.)
2010.Controversies in Science and Technology, Volume 3: From Evolution to Energy.
New Rochelle, NY: Liebert Publishers.
5) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Karen Cloud-Hansen, Christina Matta, and Jo Handelsman, (eds).
2008.Controversies in Science and Technology, Volume 2: From Climate to Chromosomes.
NewRochelle, NY: Liebert Publishers.
6) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
2005.Science and Technology in Society: From Biotechnology to the Internet. Blackwell
Publishers.* Chinese edition published 2009.
7) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Abby J. Kinchy, and Jo Handelsman (editors).
2005.Controversies in Science and Technology, Volume One: From Maize to Menopause.
University of Wisconsin Press.
8) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
2003.Impure Cultures: University Biology and the World of Commerce. University of Wisconsin Press.
9) Kleinman, Daniel Lee (editor).
2000.Science, Technology, and Democracy. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
10) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1995.Politics on the Endless Frontier: Postwar Research Policy in the United States.
Duke University Press.
SPECIAL JOURNAL ISSUE
1) Albert, Mathieu and Daniel Lee Kleinman (editors). 2011. “Beyond the Canon: Pierre Bourdieu and Science and Technology Studies,” Minerva 49:3.
ARTICLES
1)Bak, Hee-Je and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
Forthcoming.“Media Cultures and the Representation of Science in Korea and the US: The BSE Case in 2008.”East Asian Science, Technology, and Society.
2)Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Robert Osley Thomas.
2016. “Codes of Commerce and Codes of Citizenship: An Historical Look at
Students as Consumers in Higher Education.” Research in the Sociology of
Organizations, 46: 197-220.
3) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Greg Downey, and Noah Weeth-Feinstein. “Imagining Success: 2016. “The Rhetoric of Innovative Science in the Mode 2 World.” Peking University
Education Review, 14:1: 2-12. Published in Chinese.
4) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Robert Osley Thomas.
2014. “Uneven Commercialization: Contradiction and Conflict in the Identity and
Practices of American Universities.” Minerva. 52(1): 1-26.
5) Suryanarayanan, Sainath and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2014. “Beekeepers’ Collective Resistance and the Politics of Pesticide Regulation in
France and the United States,” Political Power and Social Theory. 27:89-122.
6) Suryanarayanan, Sainath and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2013. “Be(e)coming Experts: The Controversy over Insecticides in the Honey Bee Colony
Collapse Disorder, ” Social Studies of Science. 43 (2): 215-40 (April).
7) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Noah Weeth Feinstein, and Greg Downey.
2013. “Beyond Commercialization: Science, Higher Education, and the Culture of
Neoliberalism.” Science and Education.22:10: 2385-2401.
8) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Sainath Suryanarayanan.
2013. “Dying Bees and the Social Production of Ignorance.” Science, Technology, and
Human Values. 38:4: 492-517.
9) Anderson, Ashley, Jason Delborne, and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2013. “Information Beyond the Forum: Motivations, Strategies and the Impacts of
Citizen Participants Seeking Information During a Consensus Conference.” Public
Understanding of Science. 22:8: 955-970.
10) Moore, Kelly, Daniel Lee Kleinman, David Hess, and Scott Frickel.
2011. “Science and Neoliberal Globalization: A Political Sociological Approach.”
Theory and Society40: 505-532.
11) Albert, Mathieu and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2011. “Bringing Bourdieu to Science andTechnology Studies,” Minerva49:3-263-273.
12) Suryanarayanan, Sainath and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2011. “Disappearing Bees and Reluctant Regulators.” Issues in Science and Technology.
Summer.
13) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Jason Delborne, and Ashley Anderson.
2011. “Engaging Citizens: The High Cost of Citizen Engagement in High Technology.”
Public Understanding of Science, 20:2: 221-240.
14) Delborne, Jason, Ashley Anderson, Daniel Lee Kleinman, Mathilde Colin, and Maria Powell.
2011. “Virtual Deliberation? Prospects and Challenges for Integrating the Internet into
Consensus Conferences.” Public Understanding of Science, 20:3: 367-384.
15) Powell, Maria, Matilde Colin, Daniel Kleinman, Jason Delborne, and Ashley Anderson.
2011. “Imagining Ordinary Citizens: Conceptualized and Actual Participants for
Deliberations on Emerging Technologies.” Science as Culture, 20:1: 37-70.
16) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Abby J. Kinchy, and Robyn Autry.
2009. “Local Variation or Global Convergence in Agricultural Biotechnology Policy?
A Comparative Analysis.,” Science and Public Policy, 36: 5: 361-371.
17) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Jason Delborne, and Robyn Autry.
2008.“Beyond the Precautionary Principle in Progressive Politics: Toward the Social
Regulation of Genetically Modified Organisms.” Tailoring Biotechnology, 4:1/2:41-
54.
18) Kinchy, Abby J. and Daniel Lee Kleinman, and Robyn Autry.
2008.“Against Free Markets, Against Science? Regulating the Socio-economic Effects of Biotechnology.” Rural Sociology 73: 2: 147-180.
19) Powell, Maria and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2008.“Building Citizen Capacities for Participation in Technoscientific Decisionmaking:
The Democratic Virtues of the Consensus Conference Model.” Public
Understandingof Science.17: 329-48.
20) Vallas, Steven P. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2008.Contradiction, Convergence, and the Knowledge Economy: The Co-Evolution of
Academic and Commercial Biotechnology.” Socio-Economic Review. 6: 2: 283
-311.
21) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Abby J. Kinchy.
2007.“Against the Neoliberal Steamroller? The Biosafety Protocol and the Social Regulation of Agricultural Biotechnology.” Agriculture and Human Values. 24: 2 (June): 195-206.
22) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Maria Powell, Joshua Grice, Judith Adrian, and Carol Lobes.
2007.“A Toolkit for Democratizing Science and Technology Policy: The Practical
Mechanics of Organizing a Consensus Conference.” Bulletin of
Science,Technology and Society. 27:2: 154-169.
23) Kinchy, Abby J. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2005. “Democratizing Science, Debating Values,” Dissent, Summer: 54-62.
24) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Abby J. Kinchy.
2003.“Boundaries in Science Policymaking: Bovine Growth Hormone in the European Union.” Sociological Quarterly 44: 4: 577-595.
25) Kinchy, Abby J. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2003.“Organizing Credibility: Structural Considerations on the Borders of Ecology and Politics.” Social Studies of Science 33:4.
26) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Abby J. Kinchy.
2003.“Why Ban Bovine Growth Hormone?: Science, Social Welfare, and the Divergent Biotech Policy Landscapes in Europe and the United States.” Science as Culture 12 (3): 375-414.
27) Klein, Hans and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2002.“The Social Construction of Technology: Structural Considerations.” Science, Technology, and Human Values 27:1: 28-52* (Reprinted in Rayvon Fouché
(ed.). Technology Studies. Sage Publications. 2008.)
28) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Steven Vallas.
2001.“Science, Capitalism, and the Rise of the ‘Knowledge Worker: The Changing Structure of Knowledge Production in the United States.” Theory and Society 30: 451-492.
29) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1998. “Beyond the Science Wars: Science, Technology, and Democracy,” Politics and the Life Sciences, 16(2): 133-145.
30) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1998.“Untangling Context: Understanding a University Laboratory in the Commercial
World,” Science, Technology, and Human Values, 23:3: 285-314.
31) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1998.“Pervasive Influence: Intellectual Property, Industrial History, and University Science,” Science and Public Policy, 25:2: 95-102.
32) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Mark Solovey.
1995."Hot Science/ Cold War: The National Science Foundation after World War II,"
Radical History Review (special issue: "The Cold War and Expert Knowledge:
New Essays on the History of the National Security State), 63: 110-139.
33) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1994."Layers of Interests, Layers of Influence: Business and the Genesis of the National
Science Foundation." Science, Technology, and Human Values19: 259-282.
(Reprinted in Susan Silbey (ed.). Law and Science, Volume II: Regulation of
Property, Practices and Products. Ashgate Publishing. 2008.)
34) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Jack Kloppenburg, Jr.
1991."Aiming for the Discursive High Ground: Monsanto and the Biotechnology Controversy." Sociological Forum 6:427-447.
35) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Lawrence J. Cohen.
1991."The Decontextualization of Mental Illness: The Portrayal of Work in Psychiatric Drug Advertisements." Social Science and Medicine 32: 867-874.
36) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Jack Kloppenburg, Jr.
1988."Biotechnology and University-Industry Relations: Policy Issues in Research and
the Creation of Intellectual Property at a Land Grant University." Policy Studies
Journal 17:83-96.
37) Kloppenburg, Jack, Jr., Daniel Lee Kleinman, and Gerardo Otero.
1988."La Biotechnologia en Estados Unidos y el Tercer Mundo." Revista Mexicana de Sociologia 50: 97-120. In Spanish.
38) Kloppenburg, Jack, Jr. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
1987."Seed Wars: Common Heritage, Private Property, and Political Strategy." Socialist Review 95: 7-41 (abbreviated version reprinted in GeneWatch,1987, 4: 1, 2, 10-12).
39) Kloppenburg, Jack, Jr. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
1987."The Plant Germplasm Controversy: Analyzing Empirically the Distribution of the World's Plant Genetic Resources." BioScience 37: 190-198.
40) Kloppenburg, Jack, Jr. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
1987."Seeds of Struggle: Genetic Resources and Geopolitics." Technology Review 90: 47-53 (reprinted in Technology Strategies, London: Strategic Directions Publishers, Ltd., 1987, and in Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology Monitor, II: 19).
41) Kloppenburg, Jack, Jr. and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
1987."Seeds and Sovereignty." Diversity 11: 29-33.
42) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
1986."Biotechnology for Sale: Monsanto and the Biotechnology Controversy." Wisconsin Academy Review 33: 23-26.
BOOK CHAPTERS
1)Hess, David J., Sulfikar Amir, Scott Frickel, Daniel Lee Kleinman, Kelly Moore and Logan Williams.
2017. “Structural Inequality and the Politics of Science and Technology.” In Handbook of Science and Technology Studies (4th Edition), edited byUlrike Felt, Rayvon Fouché, Clark Miller, Laurel Smith-Doerr. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
2)Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
2016. “From Matters of Integrity to Cultural Transformation: Higher Education in the
Era of Neoliberalism.” In Tracey Bretag (editor), Handbook of Academic Integrity.
New York: Springer.
3) Downey, Greg, Noah Weeth Feinstein, Daniel Lee Kleinman, Chisato Fukada, and Sigrid Peterson.
2016. “Dreaming and living interdisciplinarity: The case of the Wisconsin Institutes for
Discovery.” In Scott Frickel, Mathieu Albert, and Barbara Prainsack (editors),
Investigating Interdisciplinary Research:Theory and Practice Across the Disciplines. Piscataway, NJ: Rutgers University Press. Expected publication: November.
3)Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Sainath Suryanarayanan.
- “Ignorance and Industry: Agrichemicals and Honey Bee Deaths.” In Mathias Gross
and Linsey McGoey (eds.), Handbook of Ignorance. Routledge.
5) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
2015. “Sticking up for the Liberal Arts and Humanities Education: Governance,
Leadership and Fiscal Crisis.” In Feisal Mohamed and Gordon Hutner (editors). A
New Deal for the Humanities. Rutgers University Press.
6) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Kelly Moore.
2014. “Introduction: Science, Technology, and Society.” In Daniel Lee Kleinman and
Kelly Moore (eds.), Routledge Handbook of Science, Technology, and Society.
London: Routledge.
7) Kleinman, Daniel Lee, Jacob Habinek, and Steven P Vallas.
2011.“Codes of Commerce: The Use of Business Rhetoric in American Academia,
1960-2000.” In Joseph Hermanowicz (ed.), The American Academic Profession
Transformations in American Higher Education. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins
University Press.
8) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
2010.“The Commercialization of Academic Culture and the Future of the University.” In
Hans Radder (ed.), The Commodification of Academic Research: Analyses Assessments, Alternatives. University of Pittsburgh Press.
9) Vallas, Steven P., Daniel Lee Kleinman, Dina Biscotti.
2010. “The Making of the Knowledge Economy: State Intervention and the
Commercialization of the Life Sciences.” In Fred Block and Matthew Keller (eds.),
Stateof Innovation: The US Government’s Role in Technology Development,
ParadigmPublishers.
10) Kriplean, Travis and Daniel Lee Kleinman.
2008.“Our Information Future: From Open Source Software to the Digital Divide.” Pages 115-139 in Daniel Lee Kleinman, Karen Cloud-Hansen, Christina Matta, and Jo
Handelsman(eds.), Controversies in Science andTechnology: From Climate to Chromosomes, volume 2. Liebert.
11) Cloud-Hansen, Karen, Daniel Lee Kleinman, Christina Matta, and Jo Handelsman.
2008.“Introduction: From Chromosomes to the Cosmos.” Pages 3-24 in Daniel Lee Kleinman,KarenCloud-Hansen, Christina Matta, and Jo Handelsman (eds.), Controversies inScience and Technology: From Climate to Chromosomes, volume 2. Liebert.
12) Kleinman, Daniel Lee and Steven Vallas.
2006.“Contradiction in Convergence: University andIndustry in the Biotechnology
Field.” InScott Frickel and KellyMoore. The NewPolitical Sociology of Science:
Institutions,Networks, and Power. Madison, WI:University of Wisconsin Press.
Pages 35-62.
13) Kinchy, Abby J., Daniel Lee Kleinman, and Jo Handelsman.
2005. “Introduction: From Maize to Menopause.” In Daniel Lee Kleinman, Abby J. Kinchy, and Jo Handelsman (eds.), Controversies in Science and Technology: From Maize to Menopause. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
14) Vallas, Steven P., Daniel Lee Kleinman, Abby Kinchy, and Raul Necochea.
2004.“The Future of Knowledge Work in Industry and Academia: Science, Professional Cultures, and the Public Good.” In Biotechnology Between Commerce and Civil Society, edited by Nicos Stehr (Transaction Publishers).
15) Kleinman, Daniel Lee.
Daniel Lee Kleinman-1-
2001.“Systemic Influences: Some Effects of the World of Commerce on University Science.” Degrees of Compromise: Industrial Interests and Academic Values, edited by Jennifer L. Croissant. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.