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Understanding science policies and regulatory frameworks requires going beyond official documents and expert interviews, and consider also the meanings of social conventions, political, legal and social histories, as well as other informal practices. This article discusses the implications of this approach, which often entails rendering visible the contradictions and ‘disorders’ in what seems coherent and orderly.

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This page is a summary of: Situated bio-regulation: Ethnographic sensibility at the interface of STS, policy studies and the social studies of medicine, BioSocieties, June 2013, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1057/biosoc.2013.14.
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