02 - Collaborative Working Between Academia and Industry: An Educational Scenario by the EnTIRE project
02 - Collaborative Working Between Academia and Industry: An Educational Scenario by the EnTIRE project
What is this about?
Members of The Embassy of Good Science have developed a set of eight scenarios for educational purposes and to stimulate strategic thinking about issues in research ethics and research integrity.
This scenario presents a hypothetical narrative concerning collaborative working between academia and industry and the links with research integrity.
It focuses on issues regarding:
- Conflicts of Interest between academia and industry;
- Data usage and data privacy;
- HARKing (Hypothesizing after the results are known);
- Preregistration of studies;
- Authorship criteria for academic publications;
- The duties of corresponding authors;
- Non-publication of results;
- Divergences in research integrity standards and processes between international collaborators.
Why is this important?
The scenarios are designed to help researchers, research ethics committees ('RECs'), research integrity offices ('RIOs') and research administrators to become better acquainted with The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity ('ECCRI' or 'ECoC') as a regulatory document that articulates the standards of good research practice.
They also allow users to reflect on and apply their own national and institutional research ethics and research integrity codes as well as other key regulatory documents and guidelines.
The goal is for the user to gain knowledge of the standards associated with good research practices and to make sense of these standards in different research contexts.
According to the ECCRI/ECoC, there are eight categories of research contexts that are covered by the standards of good research practice:
1) Research Environment
2) Training, Supervision and Mentoring
3) Research Procedures
4) Safeguards
5) Data Practices and Management
7) Publication and Dissemination
8) Reviewing, Evaluating and Editing