TY - BOOK AU - O'Reagan,Douglas TI - Taking Nazi technology: Allied exploitation of German science after the Second World War SN - 9781421439846 (PB : alk. paper) AV - T174.3 .O74 2019 U1 - 338.943 O66T 23 PY - 2019/// CY - Baltimore PB - Johns Hopkins University Press KW - Technology transfer KW - Germany KW - History KW - 20th century KW - World War, 1939-1945 KW - Reparations KW - Science KW - Military research N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages [255]-272) and index; Introduction -- American postwar scientific exploitation and the myth of German technological superiority -- British scientific exploitation and the allure of German know-how -- French planning for German science : student spies and exploitation in place -- Soviet reparations and the seizure of German science and technology -- Academic science and the reconstruction of Germany -- Documentation, microfilm, and information technology : the exploitation of German science and the information overload of the twentieth century -- Legacies of intellectual reparations programs : industrial know-how in the postwar world -- Conclusion N2 - This is a work of original research in the field of the history of science and technology. Following WWII, the Allies attempted the largest forced technology transfer in history by extracting intellectual reparations from occupied Germany. In nearly every field of science and technology, the Western allies--the US, UK, France, and USSR--assembled teams of experts who scoured defeated Germany seeking industrial secrets and those who could explain them. The book argues that these efforts changed international ideas of what it takes to transfer technology and were themselves shaped by how policy makers saw science fitting into society.-- ER -