Plagiarism, fraud and academic ethics€¦ · • 725,000 students are currently involved in...
Transcript of Plagiarism, fraud and academic ethics€¦ · • 725,000 students are currently involved in...
Plagiarism, fraud and academic ethics: what tools and bodies to set up?
Pierre-Jean BenghoziObservatoire de Paris, April 2018
The New research framework Perception of plagiarism and responses to it Which institutional resolution framework ?
Summary
A NEW RESEARCHFRAMEWORK
The research framework today
• A knowledge base society and economy• Collective and partnership dimensionA political issue
• Managing andsupervising diversified activities• Measuring projects, individual activities or organizations• Quantifying activities + enriched Key Performance indicators
Increasingly complexassessment methods
• Legitimating scientific choices• Justify its existence by its results / productions• Contrasting contexts
Pressure to accountability
• almost unlimited access to a hyper-offering of academic papers
• easy to cut / paste / adapt / translate• opportunistic collective strategies
unprecedentedtechnologicalpossibilities
Industrializing evaluation
• Externalizing evaluation• Externalizing evaluation• Publish or perishIncreased evaluation and
accountability concerns
• Support of decisions• Support of decisions• Guide to assessment• Encouraging mimicry
Increasingly prominentrankings
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Consequence :pressure from and on academic journals
A multiplication of existing medias• Private and public• Print and digital on line
But not outweighed by the growing number of submissions
• A high average rejection rate: from 50% to 90%. • Rejection = quality management and success factor of the journal
An international situation that challenges research and individualsin each country
• Professionalization of teaching and research practices and careers in teaching and research
• International competition between institutions• "research and therefore publish" or "research to publish"
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New research « economics »
• Charity Business or for-profit organization• Various monetization solutions
• Paid submissions, subscriptions, platforms, pay per view, Open Access
Actual business models
• Low number of subscribers• Reduced resources + niche markets
• But an unreliable quality signal• Attracting authors• The growing role of electronic platforms
Readers and authors : a two-
sided market
A Peer Review Process system and its limitations
• Reviewers - not always - competent and efficient
• The limits of volunteering• Limits of anonymity• Consistency of editorial lines
Genenalizing double-bind evaluation
• Outnumber of journals• Outnumber of papers• Impact on quality
Congestion and overcrowding
• Reading journals or papers ?• Reputation or reading level success• Focusing and "Saint Mathieu effect"
The internet impact
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An organization of roles leading to confusion of practices
Author Publisher
RefereeAssociated editor
• Roles occupied in turn• Hence the particular importance of
• Enrolment in social networks • Structuring of scientific communities
• Consequences: opportunities to take advantage of confusing roles
THE PERCEPTION OF PLAGIARISM AND THE RESPONSES TO BE BROUGHT FORWARD
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Perception of evolution
63% of respondents worried about the increase in plagiarism.
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
… disciplines all affected, but in different ways
Plagiarized people: the first to be affected
76% have been victims or witnesses of scientific plagiarism
… and this persists(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
… but not the only one
… what about the readers ??(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
Plagiarists: who are they ?
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
How to react ?
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
Which appeal bodies ?
• Disciplinary Committee (29 respondents)• Chairperson or Institution Executive (12 respondents)• Ethics Committee (10 respondents)• Scientific Board (8 respondents)• Dean of Faculty (6 respondents)• Settlement Legal Services (5 respondents) • Doctoral school (4 respondents)• Department Chairmanship (3 respondents)
Only one respondents (out of two) clearly identified the following
Hence : the need to create and implement appropriate procedures
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
Repair work
• 55% of the interviewees did not attempt to obtain any redress. They are convinced that they should act in vain, lacking success and wasting time.
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
A SOLUTION TO ESTABLISH AN INSTITUTIONAL DISPUTE RESOLUTION FRAMEWORK
An interesting system already experienced
Solving two basic issues• "Tell the righteous"
• Community peacemaking• Avoiding the abuse of plagiarism...• But also, avoid abusive or slanderous denunciations.
• Arranging different possible formats of action• Direct requests from the plagiarized person• The whistleblower's involvement if he or she is other• Information and solicitation of potential third party
structures (review, conference, association, publisher)• Applying for assistance at one's own establishment• The resort to the plagiarist hierarchy• The establishment of a mediation body• Advertising on the web or via various blogs• Filing of legal complaints
• An expert panel• An analysis initiated from stylized cases• A basic summary document• Validation by the scholarly societies
concerned• Scientific Councils • Representative of associations and major journals
Method of working
An awareness raising policy and a mediation mechanism Empowering disciplinary communities Establishing a means of dealing with disputes Developing capacities for investigation and
arbitration Ensuring the regulation of relations and pacification
of academic coopetition Gradually defining shared jurisprudence and good
practices
Proposals and aims
• A reference instrument• Can be mobilized at the request of one or all parties• Independent of institutions (establishments, journals...)
The system basics
• An institutional body that can provide an investigation• Once suspected or reported, after disclosure of the possible offence
• Mechanisms to protect the whistleblower, the plagiarized and the alleged plagiarist
• Confidentiality during analysis phase• Participants in the system are also subject to strict confidentiality.
• The provision and processing of contradictory documents• Defence briefs• Answers or argued appeals before publication of findings• Letters of Remarks from Parties
The system principles
• Opinions on whether plagiarism is true or not and the extent of plagiarism• Characterization of the fault or absence of fault • Suggestions to the parties and authorities concerned on ways of redressing or even sanctions
CONCLUSION
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• 725,000 students are currently involved in doctoral programmes in Europe. That's 240,000 a year. Thus, teaching ethics and integrity in traditional classes of 15 students on average would require more than 1,600 courses/teachers.
• 500 to 600 papers are withdrawn per year. And it's part of the iceberg. Once an article is published, it is quoted, the authors quote themselves from author to author without returning to the sources... .
How to train teachers and make real "Virtue Ethic"?
How to make ethics courses mandatory?
Which actions ?
• When academia’s only answer is to turn to the legal system
• When victims or witnesses of frauds are doublypunished
• When “urban legends” cloud thinking
• When inappropriate mechanisms are put into place
When acting ?
• A mechanism restricted to the francophone disciplinary space
• A mechanism restricted to a specific institution• Nature of embedding and location of the
institutional framework• Sustainable support of system costs• Methods for ensuring transparency of analyses
and procedures• Beyond plagiarism, the more general issue of
scientific fraud and integrity
Limits and pending issues
To be part of a resolution string
(cc) Benghozi et Bergadaà, 2011
Informing
Supporting and going with
Controling and scrutinizing
Sanctionning
Bringing peace to communities
• An intermediate mechanism between direct negotiation and legal proceedings
• Ensuring the admissibility of an application and steering claims
• Support contradictory analyses• To be subject to appeal• Acting and ensuring mediations
• Information, support and good practices• Early lessons on the cases of Plagiarism
In a nutshell …
• Status: an association (founded 2016)https://responsable-academia.org/
• Transdisciplinary and at all levels of intervention
•First circle: scientists and scholarly associations
•Second circle: universities, publishers, detection software...
•Other stakeholders: medias…
The International Institute for Research and Action on Academic Fraud and Plagiarism
(IRAFPA)
Plan 6Mediation and
expertise
Integrated Institute
Plan 1Communicate
through a newsletter
Plan 4Public Conferences
Plan 2 Conceptual and pragmatic
research
Plan 3Workshops and
scientific conferences
Plan 5Five certifications(workshops and
follow-up)
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The Institute IRAFPA
Thank you for your attention
Benghozi P-J (2011)« Journals and Journal Rankings », in Dameron, S & Durand, T. (eds). 2011. Redesigning Management Education and Research, Challenging Proposals from European Scholars. Edward Elgar, pp. 215-221
Benghozi P.-J., Bergadaà M. (2012) « Publications et plagiat à l'ère d'internet : réponses collectives à de nouvelles pratiques », in Le plagiat de la recherche scientifique, Gilles Guglielmi et Geneviève Koubi (Ed.), pp. 207-221, LGDJ, Paris. http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00705481
Benghozi P.-J., Bergadaà M. (2012) “Métier de chercheur en gestion et web. Risques et questionnements éthiques”, Revue Française de Gestion, vol. 38, n° 220, pp. 51-69.
Institut International de Recherche et d’Action sur la Fraude et le Plagiat Académiques (IRAFPA) https://responsable-academia.org/
References
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