The phrase
junk science appears to have been in use prior to 1985. A 1985
United States Department of Justice report by the Tort Policy Working Group noted: The use of such invalid
scientific evidence (commonly referred to as 'junk science') has resulted in findings of causation which simply cannot be justified or understood from the standpoint of the current state of credible scientific or medical knowledge. In 1989, the climate scientist
Jerry Mahlman (Director of the
Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory) characterized the theory that
global warming was due to
solar variation (presented in
Scientific Perspectives on the Greenhouse Problem by
Frederick Seitz et al.) as "noisy junk science."
Peter W. Huber popularized the term with respect to litigation in his 1991 book ''Galileo's Revenge: Junk Science in the Courtroom.'' The book has been cited in over 100 legal textbooks and references; as a consequence, some sources cite Huber as the first to coin the term. By 1997, the term had entered the legal lexicon as seen in an opinion by
Supreme Court of the United States Justice
John Paul Stevens: An example of 'junk science' that should be excluded under the
Daubert standard as too unreliable would be the testimony of a
phrenologist who would purport to prove a defendant's future dangerousness based on the contours of the defendant's skull. Lower courts have subsequently set guidelines for identifying junk science, such as the 2005 opinion of
United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit Judge
Frank H. Easterbrook: Positive reports about magnetic water treatment are not replicable; this plus the lack of a physical explanation for any effects are hallmarks of junk science. As the subtitle of Huber's book,
Junk Science in the Courtroom, suggests, his emphasis was on the use or misuse of expert testimony in civil litigation. One prominent example cited in the book was litigation over casual contact in the spread of
AIDS. A California school district sought to prevent a young boy with AIDS, Ryan Thomas, from attending
kindergarten. The school district produced an expert witness, Steven Armentrout, who testified that a possibility existed that AIDS could be transmitted to schoolmates through yet undiscovered "vectors". However, five experts testified on behalf of Thomas that AIDS is not transmitted through casual contact, and the court affirmed the "solid science" (as Huber called it) and rejected Armentrout's argument. In 1999,
Paul Ehrlich and others advocated public policies to improve the dissemination of valid environmental scientific knowledge and discourage junk science: The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports offer an antidote to junk science by articulating the current consensus on the prospects for climate change, by outlining the extent of the uncertainties, and by describing the potential benefits and costs of policies to
address climate change. In a 2003 study about changes in environmental activism regarding the
Crown of the Continent Ecosystem, Pedynowski noted that junk science can undermine the credibility of science over a much broader scale because misrepresentation by special interests casts doubt on more defensible claims and undermines the credibility of all research. In his 2006 book
Junk Science, Dan Agin emphasized two main causes of junk science: fraud, and
ignorance. In the first case, Agin discussed falsified results in the development of
organic transistors: As far as understanding junk science is concerned, the important aspect is that both Bell Laboratories and the international physics community were fooled until someone noticed that noise records published by
Jan Hendrik Schön in several papers were identical—which means physically impossible. In the second case, he cites an example that demonstrates ignorance of statistical principles in the lay press: Since no such proof is possible [that
genetically modified food is harmless], the article in
The New York Times was what is called a "bad rap" against the U.S. Department of Agriculture—a bad rap based on a junk-science belief that it's possible to prove a
null hypothesis. Agin asks the reader to step back from the rhetoric, as "how things are labeled does not make a science junk science." In its place, he offers that junk science is ultimately motivated by the desire to hide undesirable truths from the public. The rise of
open-access (free to read) journals has resulted in economic pressure on academic publishers to publish junk science. Even when the journal is peer-reviewed, the authors, rather than the readers, become the customer and the source of funding for the journal, so the publisher is incentivized to publish as many papers as possible, including those that are methodologically unsound. ==Misuse in public relations==