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Lan Thi Nguyen; Kulthida Tuamsuk – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2025
Research ethics is considered an important element in academia, concerning the behavior of researchers in promoting scientific integrity. This study aims to survey scientific integrity of researchers in scholarly publishing across 16 global and frontier research universities in Thailand. The quantitative method was used to collect data from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Integrity, Ethics, Moral Values
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Tamarinde L. Haven; Bert Molewijk; Lex Bouter; Guy Widdershoven; Fenneke Blom; Joeri Tijdink – Research Ethics, 2024
There is an increased focus on fostering integrity in research by through creating an open culture where research integrity dilemmas can be discussed. We describe a pilot intervention study that used Moral Case Deliberation (MCD), a method that originated in clinical ethics support, to discuss research integrity dilemmas with researchers. Our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Researchers, Integrity, Moral Values
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Yeo-Teh, Nicole Shu Ling; Tang, Bor Luen – Research Ethics, 2022
Publication pressure has been touted to promote questionable research practices (QRP) and scientific or research misconduct (RM). However, logically attractively as it is, there is no unequivocal evidence for this notion, and empirical studies have produced conflicting results. Other than difficulties in obtaining unbiased empirical data, a direct…
Descriptors: Publish or Perish Issue, Ethics, Research Problems, Correlation
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Schembri, Natalie; Jahic Jašic, Alma – Research Ethics, 2022
Interview-based research in multilingual situations can present researchers with specific ethical challenges relating to language-based power play, data handling and presentation. Studies indicate favouring the L1 (first language) as an interviewing language may produce better quality data, but external pressures can favour English as the dominant…
Descriptors: Ethics, Native Language, Interviews, English (Second Language)
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Fletcher, Eric – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2022
Researching ethically is an institutional requirement and cornerstone of good everyday practice in conducting research, adopting a mindful consideration for participants and resisting the temptation to use methodological approaches which may exploit participants or their trust in the research process or researcher. In the context of outdoor…
Descriptors: Ethics, Aquatic Sports, Outdoor Education, Trust (Psychology)
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Bingham, Adrian; Delap, Lucy; Jackson, Louise; Settle, Louise – History of Education, 2016
This article reflects on methodological and ethical issues that have shaped a collaborative project which aims to chart social, legal and political responses to child sexual abuse in England and Wales across the twentieth century. The etymological problem of searching for child sexual abuse in the historical archive is discussed, given that the…
Descriptors: Historical Interpretation, Child Abuse, Sexual Abuse, Historians
Echols, Katherine I. – ProQuest LLC, 2017
One of the most overlooked and complex problems that universities and colleges face nation-wide is how to reduce and eliminate research misconduct. Because of the confidential nature of allegations of research misconduct and the high rate of underreporting, administrators at scholarly institutions struggle with understanding the cause of such…
Descriptors: Departments, Leadership, College Administration, Research Problems
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Locke, Terry; Alcorn, Noeline; O'Neill, John – Educational Action Research, 2013
This article begins by raising issues around the way in which ethical approval for research is managed in university settings, where committees often base their assumptions on a principlist approach making a number of assumptions that we consider to be contestable, such as a neat separation between researcher and researched. However, collaborative…
Descriptors: Action Research, Ethics, Researchers, Research Administration
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de Villiers, Rian – Perspectives in Education, 2012
Vivisection (live animal experimentation) is a controversial issue for many people. The purpose of this case study is to examine the attitudes of prospective teachers toward vivisection in education and research, to determine if gender has an influence on these attitudes, and to discuss the implications of these attitudes with regard to teaching…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Scientific Research, Animals, Foreign Countries
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Rossman, Gretchen B.; Rallis, Sharon F. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2010
This introductory article frames the contributions for this issue on everyday ethics--moments that demand moral considerations and ethical choices that researchers encounter. We discuss concerns raised within the research community about the tendency to observe merely obligatory ethical procedures as outlined in Human Subjects Review regulations.…
Descriptors: Ethics, Moral Values, Evaluative Thinking, Researchers
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Rallis, Sharon F.; Rossman, Gretchen B. – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2010
This article provides a brief summary of the seven articles in this special issue through the lens of the concept of "caring reflexivity". In joining "caring" and "reflexivity", we deepen the conversation about what constitutes reflexivity, encouraging an explicit focus on the relational. Revisiting the first article,…
Descriptors: Reflection, Caring, Foreign Countries, Social Justice
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Hammersley, Martyn – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2008
This article is a reply to Gewirtz and Cribb's argument for ethical reflexivity, presented in a previous issue of this journal. These authors compared their views with mine, suggesting a way in which the differences between our positions could be overcome. I argue that, while there is certainly substantial agreement, there are also some…
Descriptors: Educational Sociology, Moral Values, Ethics, Reader Response
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Kaslow, Nadine J.; Gurman, Alan S. – Counseling and Values, 1985
Considers ethical issues that arise in conduct of family therapy research, emphasizing (1) researcher's responsibility to protect rights of research participants, (2) confidentiality and informed consent, (3) researcher's values, and (4) methodology. In each area, parallels are drawn between ethical issues facing family clinicians and those facing…
Descriptors: Confidentiality, Ethics, Family Counseling, Moral Values
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Smith, R. Jeffrey – Science, 1977
Reports the University of New York at Albany has been charged with violations of federal and state regulations for not obtaining approval of an ethics committee to conduct research on human subjects. (SL)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Ethics, Moral Values, Psychological Studies
Nickel, James W. – 1989
Many people feel that the making of value judgments is an important aspect of the work of science. This paper explores some of the arguments in support of the claim that scientific work requires individual and social values and raises significant moral questions. Discussed here are: (1) the constitutive value of science; (2) the ethics involved in…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Credibility, Ethics, Integrity
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