Difference between revisions of "Theme:65e6f304-51e2-4e41-93d3-e48518248b39"
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In particular, those research areas in which practitioners also offer services to clients, such as sociologists, psychologists, or statisticians, have well-established domain-specific codes of conduct. | In particular, those research areas in which practitioners also offer services to clients, such as sociologists, psychologists, or statisticians, have well-established domain-specific codes of conduct. | ||
− | |Important For= | + | |Important For=PhD students; Supervisors; Junior researchers; Early career researchers; Senior researchers |
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{{Related To | {{Related To | ||
|Related To Resource=Resource:Ad7f9f5c-a519-4744-a7c6-5fba091e9264 | |Related To Resource=Resource:Ad7f9f5c-a519-4744-a7c6-5fba091e9264 | ||
+ | |Related To Theme=Theme:2446855b-0acc-4e28-817e-a65d7e00162e | ||
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Revision as of 11:08, 27 May 2020
Themes
Discipline specific codes and guidelines on research integrity
What is this about?
Some guidelines concern all areas of research, but there are also codes and guidelines which concern specific scientific disciplines or areas
Why is this important?
Some scientific areas can have domain-specific challenges when it comes to research integrity. That is why it can be important to have more specific guidelines than those available in domain-general guidelines.
In particular, those research areas in which practitioners also offer services to clients, such as sociologists, psychologists, or statisticians, have well-established domain-specific codes of conduct.For whom is this important?
The Embassy Editorial team, Giulia Inguaggiato, Iris Lechner, Rosie Hastings, Hugh Desmond contributed to this theme. Latest contribution was Mar 25, 2021