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Systemic Obstacles to Addressing Research Misconduct in Higher Education: A Case Study.
Golden, James; Mazzotta, Catherine M; Zittel-Barr, Kimberly.
  • Golden J; Social Work Department, Buffalo State College SUNY, 1300 Elmwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA.
  • Mazzotta CM; Social Work Department, Buffalo State College SUNY, 1300 Elmwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA.
  • Zittel-Barr K; Social Work Department, Buffalo State College SUNY, 1300 Elmwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14222 USA.
J Acad Ethics ; : 1-12, 2021 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2230430
ABSTRACT
Several widely publicized incidents of academic research misconduct, combined with the politicization of the role of science in public health and policy discourse (e.g., COVID, immunizations) threaten to undermine faith in the integrity of empirical research. Researchers often maintain that peer-review and study replication allow the field to self-police and self-correct; however, stark disparities between official reports of academic research misconduct and self-reports of academic researchers, specifically with regard to data fabrication, belie this argument. Further, systemic imperatives in academic settings often incentivize institutional responses that focus on minimizing reputational harm rather than the impact of fabricated data on the integrity of extant and future research.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Case report Language: English Journal: J Acad Ethics Year: 2021 Document Type: Article

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Case report Language: English Journal: J Acad Ethics Year: 2021 Document Type: Article