Senators, Congresscritters and the Social Sciences
I hadn’t realised that Coburn’s amendment is not the only effort in recent history to defund the social sciences. From a correspondent’s email (with hyperlinks re-arranged slightly):
In the spring of ‘06 Kay Bailey Hutchison promoted the idea of cutting all social-science funding from NSF, and briefly introduced legislation.In 1995, during Gingrich’s high tide, the House Budget Committee endorsed a no-social-science bill:
And there was a similar round in ‘81.
Work by political scientists (including the unimpeachably right-of-center Timothy Groseclose ) suggests that politics in Congress crucially depends on the swapping of favors, legislative concessions etc. In this spirit, I would like to suggest a compromise to Senator Coburn’s office - that funding for political science be retained as is, but be supplemented by an entirely new budget line, to be entitled the Coburn Research Assistance Program. This would be specifically devoted to the investigation of social-scientific hypotheses proposed by Senator Coburn and those of his Senatorial colleagues whom he feels qualified to help out. The first grant could go e.g. towards an investigation of whether having more than one girl using the school restroom at a time is empirically associated with an increased propensity towards lesbianism. An experimental design would seem the obvious way to study this - there might be difficulty in getting this through the human subjects review board (and some - shock horror - might find the underlying insinuations about ‘the gay problem’ to be offensive) , but with enough political will …
Comments
Paul Krugman has a great response to Sen. Coburn at his NYTimes Blog.
Posted by: Shag from Brookline | October 9, 2009 07:46 AM
Also, in 2007, Rep. Campbell of California tried to take an itemized approach to preventing certain areas of research from receiving NSF funding.
Posted by: andrew | October 11, 2009 04:03 AM
Proxmire used to love to mock funding for psychology. McCain ’s camp attacked last year a project to fund research on bears; turns out the researcher was very well spoken and McCain ended up looking bad. This is a shopworn attempt to get in the news, just this time Coburn’s staff has a tin ear (like McCain’s staff) for this strategy.
Posted by: Doug Hess | October 11, 2009 11:21 PM
I thought I left a comment here about another, somewhat bizarre, attempt to restrict NSF funding, but it has not appeared. Maybe it got sent to the spam filter since it had a link.
Posted by: andrew | October 12, 2009 07:11 AM