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  1.  51
    The mental test as a boundary object in early-20th-century Russian child science.Andy Byford - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (4):22-58.
    This article charts the history of mental testing in the context of the rise and fall of Russian child science between the 1890s and the 1930s. Tracing the genealogy of testing in scientific experimentation, scholastic assessment, medical diagnostics and bureaucratic accounting, it follows the displacements of this technology along and across the boundaries of the child science movement. The article focuses on three domains of expertise – psychology, pedagogy and psychiatry, examining the key guises that mental testing assumed in them (...)
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  2.  14
    Eglė Rindzevičiūtė, The Will to Predict: Orchestrating the Future through Science Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2023. Pp. 306. ISBN 978-1-5017-6977-1. $56.95 (hardcover). [REVIEW]Andy Byford - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-3.
  3.  4
    Russian eugenics in transnational and transhistorical perspective: from comparison to translation: With and without Galton: Vasilii Florinskii and the fate of eugenics in Russia, by N. Krementsov, Cambridge, UK, Open Book Publishers, 2018, xxvi + 666 pp., £32.95 (Hardback), ISBN 978-1-78374-512-8. [REVIEW]Andy Byford - 2019 - Annals of Science 76 (3-4):355-364.
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    Russian eugenics in transnational and transhistorical perspective: from comparison to translation: With and without Galton: Vasilii Florinskii and the fate of eugenics in Russia, by N. Krementsov, Cambridge, UK, Open Book Publishers, 2018, xxvi + 666 pp., £32.95 (Hardback), ISBN 978-1-78374-512-8. [REVIEW]Andy Byford - 2019 - Annals of Science 76 (3-4):355-364.
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