Anna Kirkland is Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and Associate Professor of Women’s Studies and Political Science at the University of Michigan.
"The book is a case study of one of many complex and obscure tasks
that government performs."
*Choice*
"Highly recommend this book to anyone interested in contemporary
vaccine hesitancy and refusal, and, more broadly, in questions
about the intersection of science, law, and public policy in
democratic societies."
*Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences*
"Vaccine Court provides historical, political, and social context
to our countrys unprecedented attempt to resolve the conflict
between those certain of vaccine harms and the science that may or
may not support their claims. In a compelling and sympathetic
manner, Kirkland explores the murky netherworld between science,
where truths are often determined by decades of study, and court,
where truths are determined after a few weeks of testimony."
*Paul A. Offit, MD,author of Deadly Choices: How the Anti-Vaccine
Movement Threatens Us All*
"In her highly original and meticulously researched book, Anna
Kirkland takes us into the little-known but highly contested
federal court system responsible for not just compensating
individuals and families injured by vaccines, but also adjudicating
competing claims of risk, science, and expertise. Vaccine Court
exposes the myriad ways law must simultaneously build consensus and
create dissent. Skillfully presented with detailed analysis and
compelling examples, this book is a powerful vindication of the
state as imperfect, indispensable to efforts to ensure public
health, and in dire need of new ways to create greater access and
equity for all."
*Jennifer Reich,University of Denver*
"Drawing on rich original data, Kirkland examines how the
specialized vaccine court addresses enduring tensions between
science and law, popular beliefs and expertise, and fair process
and desired outcomes, and how the right to sue is both an
inspiration and a constraint on social movements. Vaccine Court is
timely, fascinating, and important."
*Charles Epp,The University of Kansas*
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