The Summer 2006 (v. 69, no. 3) issue of Law and Contemporary Problems, an interdisciplinary publication of Duke Law School, features articles originally presented at SKAPP's Coronado Conference II.
David Michaels and Neil Vidmar, Special Editors
Foreword: Sarbanes-Oxley for Science (PDF)
David Michaels
Transparency in Public Science: Purposes, Reasons, Limits (PDF)
Sheila Jasanoff
Scientific Secrecy and "Spin": The Sad, Sleazy Saga of the Trials of Remune (PDF)
Susan Haack
Transparency and Innuendo: An Alternative to Reactive Over-Disclosure (PDF)
Scott M. Lassman
Sometimes the Silence Can Be Like the Thunder: Access to Pharmaceutical Data at the FDA (PDF)
Peter Lurie and Allison Zieve
The People's Agent: Executive Branch Secrecy and Accountability in an Age of Terrorism (PDF)
Sidney A. Shapiro and Rena I. Steinzor
Public Health Versus Court-sponsored Secrecy (PDF)
Daniel J. Givelber and Anthony Robbins
Open Secrets: The Widespread Availability of Information About the Health and Environmental Effects of Chemicals (PDF)
James W. Conrad Jr.
Why We Need Global Standards for Corporate Disclosure (PDF)
Allen L. White
Related article: Hidden from the Public by Order of the Court: The Case Against Government-Enforced Secrecy, by Chief Judge Joseph F. Anderson, Jr., U.S. District Judge, District of South Carolina. 55 S.C. Law Review, 2004. (here)