Difference between revisions of "Resource:03548286-0051-4694-8912-8983d823a5d6"
From The Embassy of Good Science
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{{Resource | {{Resource | ||
|Resource Type=Guidelines | |Resource Type=Guidelines | ||
| − | |Title= | + | |Title=Recommendations 1, 2, 3: Research Integrity and the Organisation of Science |
|Has Related Initiative=Initiative:9c741398-d980-40b8-9ba1-89eebf1c2c71 | |Has Related Initiative=Initiative:9c741398-d980-40b8-9ba1-89eebf1c2c71 | ||
|Is About=This set of recommendations (3 out of the 9 POIESIS recommendations) focuses on strengthening research integrity through better institutional organization, governance, and culture. It calls for aligning the principles of integrity such as honesty, accountability, and transparency with actual research practices. This includes reforming incentive structures that may encourage questionable practices, supporting integrity training, and ensuring fair evaluation systems. The aim is to make integrity not just a formal requirement but an integral part of the daily research environment. | |Is About=This set of recommendations (3 out of the 9 POIESIS recommendations) focuses on strengthening research integrity through better institutional organization, governance, and culture. It calls for aligning the principles of integrity such as honesty, accountability, and transparency with actual research practices. This includes reforming incentive structures that may encourage questionable practices, supporting integrity training, and ensuring fair evaluation systems. The aim is to make integrity not just a formal requirement but an integral part of the daily research environment. | ||
Revision as of 10:06, 31 October 2025
Guidelines
Recommendations 1, 2, 3: Research Integrity and the Organisation of Science
Related Initiative
What is this about?
This set of recommendations (3 out of the 9 POIESIS recommendations) focuses on strengthening research integrity through better institutional organization, governance, and culture. It calls for aligning the principles of integrity such as honesty, accountability, and transparency with actual research practices. This includes reforming incentive structures that may encourage questionable practices, supporting integrity training, and ensuring fair evaluation systems. The aim is to make integrity not just a formal requirement but an integral part of the daily research environment.
Why is this important?
Scientific credibility depends on integrity. When institutional systems push for rapid results, high output, or competitive funding, they can unintentionally compromise ethical standards. Embedding integrity at all levels ensures trustworthy results and sustained public confidence in science.
For whom is this important?
Funding bodies and policymakersResearch Ethics CommitteesResearch Institutions and UniversitiesResearchers
