Joan Warnow-Blewett


Joan Carol Warnow-Blewett was an American archivist and staff member of the American Institute of Physics for 32 years.

Early life

Warnow-Blewett was born to parents David Nelson and Edith Nelson, American immigrants who were born in Sweden.

Career

In 1965, Warnow-Blewett was hired at American Institute of Physics as Librarian of the Niels Bohr Library. In 1974, she was promoted to Associate Director for the Center for History of Physics.
From 1986 to 1989, she was a council member of the Society of American Archivists.

Contribution to scientific collaboration

Warnow-Blewett's work was a significant influence on the book, Structures of Scientific Collaboration by Wesley Shrum, Joel Genuth and Ivan Chompalov.
Starting in 1989, she assembled a multi-disciplinary team including social sciences, history and archives. This team collected data on 60 scientific collaborations over the span of a decade. They coded the interviews with the collaborative teams in order to create a massive database covering themes such as "invention and practice; and issues of specialization, decision-making, values, subcontracting, instrumentation, funding and, of course, credit allocation."

Personal life

Warnow-Blewett was married three times. Her first marriage, which was until 1964, was to inventor Morton Warnow, with whom she had three children. In 1983, she married physicist John Paul Blewett and was married to Blewett until his death in 2000. Her third marriage was to physics historian, Martin Klein.
Warnow-Blewett died in Alamo, California, on May 30, 2006.
She was survived by three children, Paul Warnow, Kimmen Sjolander, and Tandy Warnow.

Works and publications

Between 1970 and 2001, Warnow-Blewett published 60 works in 105 publications. She continued to publish after her retirement from the AIP in August 1997.
;Selected notable publications:
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