The MIT Press, 2016. 258 pages. Paperback. $35.00. ISBN: 9780262529495.This book can act as a valuable guide to governments and policy practitioners seeking to form and implement science and technology policy. First, the author points out several excluded areas in science and technology policy that have resulted from complex political, cultural, and historical contexts as well as information controlled problems by a few elite bureaucrats and politicians. This is a kind of "Undone Science." Then, the theories and concepts regarding Social Movements Studies and Science and Technology Studies are reviewed with different dimensions to emphasize mobilization for public interests. The roles of various civilian organizations, including business corporations, community groups, and networks of science experts are important for materializing the public interests when civilian organizations are participate in public policy processes (Hess, 2016; 201). The complexity of modern science and technology policy is increasing, because various citizen for social equality and improvement of quality of life are expanding. Because this policy area is full of huge uncertainty and variability, there might be a kind of fallibility given that a few elites make exclusive policy decisions. Therefore, an open-door policy process might be necessary to negotiate and arbitrate with diverse stakeholders. Meanwhile, if there are many players in policy process, it can cause conflicting goals for governments to pursue and prioritize when in implementing policies due to the diversification of values. Hence, it is an important matter in which direction the governments should enforce the policies. There can be two conflicting vectors in implementing policy, seeking stability, or instability. Seeking stability refers to the pursuit of planning and control to maintain the status quo. On the other hand, seeking instability often takes the form of policy innovation, original attempts, and pioneering. The top-down approach to implementation ensures stability, while the bottom-up approach to implementation creates more instability compared with the top-down approach. The top-down approach can bring stability of public administration to governments because this way has functional rationality and governments can obtain normativity and legitimacy of public administration and policy implementation. However, there is a less probability that sufficient discussions between various parties involved in science and technology policy will be reflected in this policy process. In the case of the bottom-up implementation, the situation or context surrounding policy can be diversely interpreted though the policy objective may become ambiguous due to dynamic interactions. Aligned with the book, bottom-up policy practices might be expanded in science and technology policies because several policy participants including citizens, community organizations, and other stakeholders are open to engagement in the policy process. These days policy is the product of compromises, and ...