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Misconduct and Reporting The research enterprise is built on a foundation of truth, which has allowed society to place a high level of confidence in the conduct of research and the outcomes reported from that research. The trust between science and society will endure only if the scientific community devotes itself to ethical conduct of research. Thus, all members of the institution’s community share responsibility for promoting and maintaining the principles of academic integrity. Institutions expect researchers to adhere to the highest ethical standards in the conduct of research activities and is committed to vigorously enforcing those standards. Moreover, good faith Complainants are protected from retaliation by the provisions of state law and institutional policy. Research misconduct means misconduct in research and scholarship
Institutions and many of the agencies that fund research have explicit policy requirements related to allegations, investigations and reporting of scientific misconduct. At the heart of discussion on these topics is concern about ethical responsibilities and reporting requirements. Integrity and conscience demand not only personal adherence to ethical standards, but reporting of suspected violations of those standards. Violations should be reported in confidence to the Vice Provost for Research (the Research Integrity Officer). Reports may be made confidentially, or even anonymously. Reporting such concerns in good faith is a service to the institution and to the larger academic community, and will not jeopardize anyone's employment. Additional resources: Office of Research Integrity (ORI) |