Difference between revisions of "Theme:B3684f7e-d66f-4c61-ba16-799bc2192b15"
From The Embassy of Good Science
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{{Theme | {{Theme | ||
|Theme Type=Good Practices | |Theme Type=Good Practices | ||
− | |Has Parent Theme=Theme: | + | |Has Parent Theme=Theme:B2331451-5a6a-4aa2-a3d5-c68d2c96c8e1 |
|Title=Legal rights of accused scientists | |Title=Legal rights of accused scientists | ||
|Is About=When scientists are accused of misconduct their legal rights may be encroached upon. | |Is About=When scientists are accused of misconduct their legal rights may be encroached upon. |
Latest revision as of 14:07, 22 October 2021
Themes
Legal rights of accused scientists
What is this about?
When scientists are accused of misconduct their legal rights may be encroached upon.
Why is this important?
It is important that the principles of proportionality and due process are respected in investigations of misconduct. Otherwise this may lead to erroneous judgments of integrity commissions, or unfair punishments. Moreover, scientists, as citizens, have legal rights, and if these are not respected in self-regulatory investigations, then cases of alleged misconduct will increasingly be handled by the courts.
For whom is this important?
ScientistsPrincipal investigatorsResearchersSupervisorsUniversitiesPhD studentsResearch funding organisationsResearch performing organisations
What are the best practices?
The European Code of Conduct states that fairness and integrity are most important for procedures for investigating misconduct, principles to be followed are also stated.[1]
- ↑ European Science Foundation, All European Academies. The European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. 2017.
The Embassy Editorial team, Iris Lechner, Andrijana Perković Paloš, Hugh Desmond contributed to this theme. Latest contribution was Oct 22, 2021