Difference between revisions of "Resource:5bbdd729-8f96-432a-a0ee-56510e343d01"

From The Embassy of Good Science
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{{Resource
 
{{Resource
 
|Resource Type=Guidelines
 
|Resource Type=Guidelines
|Title=The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity
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|Title=The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity - 2017 Edition
|Is About=The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity  serves the European research community as a framework for self-regulation across all scientific and scholarly disciplines and for all research settings. The Code was published originally in English on 24 March 2017 and was translated to all official EU languages by the European Commission’s Translational Services and with the support of ALLEA Member Academies.
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|Is About=The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity  serves the European research community as a framework for self-regulation across all scientific and scholarly disciplines and for all research settings. The Code provides a set of fundamental principles for research integrity, a set of good research practices, and highlights the potential violations of research integrity. The Code was published originally in English on 24 March 2017 and was translated to all official EU languages by the European Commission’s Translational Services and with the support of ALLEA Member Academies.
|Important Because=The 2017 revised edition of the Code addresses emerging challenges emanating from technological developments, open science, citizen science and social media, among other areas. The European Commission recognises the Code as the reference document for research integrity for all EU-funded research projects and as a model for organisations and researchers across Europe.
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|Important Because=The 2017 revised edition of the Code addresses emerging challenges emanating from technological developments, open science, citizen science and social media, among other areas. The European Commission recognises the Code as the reference document for research integrity for all EU-funded research projects and as a model for organisations and researchers across Europe. It has been endorsed by the European Association of Social Psychology, in their Diversity and Scientific Integrity Statement.
|Important For=All stakeholders in research; Researchers
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|Important For=All stakeholders in research; Researchers; Civil society organisations; Clinical researchers; Early career researchers; Ethics committee members; Journals; Policy-makers; Peer-reviewers; Research Integrity Officers; Research integrity trainers; Research institutions
 
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}}
 
{{Link
 
{{Link
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{{Related To}}
 
{{Related To}}
 
{{Tags
 
{{Tags
|Involves=ALLEA Member Academies
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|Involves=ALLEA Member Academies; ALLEA; European Association of Social Psychology
 
|Has Timepoint=2017
 
|Has Timepoint=2017
 
|Has Location=Europe
 
|Has Location=Europe
|Has Virtue And Value=Honesty; Reliability; Respect; Accountability; Quality
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|Has Virtue And Value=Accountability; Honesty; Quality; Reliability; Respect
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|Has Good Practice And Misconduct=Mentoring; Research Environments; Collaborative research; Data Protection; Publication Ethics; Reviewing; Plagiarism; Falsification; Fabrication; Fairness
 
|Related To Research Area=SH - Social Sciences and Humanities; PE - Physical Sciences and Engineering; LS - Life Sciences
 
|Related To Research Area=SH - Social Sciences and Humanities; PE - Physical Sciences and Engineering; LS - Life Sciences
 
}}
 
}}

Revision as of 11:20, 10 April 2024

Guidelines

The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity - 2017 Edition

What is this about?

The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity serves the European research community as a framework for self-regulation across all scientific and scholarly disciplines and for all research settings. The Code provides a set of fundamental principles for research integrity, a set of good research practices, and highlights the potential violations of research integrity. The Code was published originally in English on 24 March 2017 and was translated to all official EU languages by the European Commission’s Translational Services and with the support of ALLEA Member Academies.

Why is this important?

The 2017 revised edition of the Code addresses emerging challenges emanating from technological developments, open science, citizen science and social media, among other areas. The European Commission recognises the Code as the reference document for research integrity for all EU-funded research projects and as a model for organisations and researchers across Europe. It has been endorsed by the European Association of Social Psychology, in their Diversity and Scientific Integrity Statement.

For whom is this important?

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