Kevles' research has focused primarily on the history of
science in America and the interactions between
science and society. A central theme in much of his work has been the tension between elite science and the norms of democratic control. He is best known for his accessible and original interpretative
histories of physics and
eugenics, and for an extensive body of scholarship that ranges widely across the histories of the physical sciences, life sciences, and technology. His books include
The Physicists (1978), a history of the American physics community,
In the Name of Eugenics (1985), currently the standard text on the history of
eugenics in the United States and Britain, and
The Baltimore Case (1998), a study of accusations of
scientific fraud. He is also a co-author of the textbook
Inventing America: A History of the United States (2002; 2nd edition 2006) and co-editor with Leroy Hood of
The Code of Codes (1992), a set of essays that explore scientific and social issues surrounding the
Human Genome Project. Recently he has been working on a history of the uses of
intellectual property in living organisms from the eighteenth century to the present and a co-authored history of the
National Academy of Sciences. Throughout his career, Kevles has brought the history of science and technology to a broad audience through his contributions to general readership publications. These have included pieces in
The New Yorker,
The New York Times,
The New York Review of Books,
Times Literary Supplement,
Scientific American, and
The Huffington Post, among others. The serialized version of his book
In the Name of Eugenics, published in
The New Yorker in 1984, received the 1985
Page One Award for excellence in science reporting. == Selected publications ==