ORI is seeking applicants with experience administering the Public Health Service Policies on Research Misconduct, 42 C.F.R. Part 93 or other federal research regulations. The position is within the Division of Education and Integrity with responsibilities that include, but are not limited to, developing and implementing activities and programs to teach the responsible conduct of research, promote research integrity, and to enable institutions to respond effectively to allegations of research misconduct.
ORI Updates
-
-
The PHS Administrative Action posted against Steven Grant in the 12/14/15 Report was listed in error. There is no PHS administrative action against Dr. Grant. ORI sincerely apologizes for the error.
-
The Office of Research Integrity (ORI) announces the appointment of a new Director, Kathryn M. Partin, PhD.Dr. Partin hails from Colorado State University....
-
ORI Division Directors Speak about Handling Misconduct
(External Link) Listen to the online broadcast of Voice of America's (VOA) interview with ORI Division Directors Zoë Hammatt and Susan Garfinkel, @17:50. Also interviewed are Arturo Casadevall and Robert Howarth. -
ORI is pleased to have awarded two research grants and five conference grants through our Research on Research Integrity program.
-
Join the U.S. Health and Human Services team as the Director for the Office of Research Integrity. Applications are being accepted until May 15, 2015.
-
Sign Up for the 2015 NIH Regional Seminar
The NIH Office of Extramural Research and the HHS Office for Human Research Protections are offering a full day workshop entitled "Getting through Human Research Reviews without Pain"Sign up on Wednesday, May 6th. The NIH Regional Seminar will be held May 6 to May 9 at the Renaissance Harborplace Hotel in Baltimore, MD. -
ORI is seeking qualified applicants to fill positions in the Division of Education and Integrity to help develop and manage programs to promote research integrity. Application deadline is April 6, 2015.
-
ORI is seeking to fund projects that foster innovative approaches to empirical research on societal, organizational, group, and individual factors that affect, both positively and negatively, integrity in research. The research will be reviewed and funded in a two-phase process. For this first phase, ORI is seeking small-scale, developmental research projects. ORI anticipates that Phase I awards will have a ceiling of up to $75,000 for a period of 12 months
-
The Office of Research Integrity (ORI) seeks to support conferences to develop multi-disciplinary networks to build upon existing evidence-based research and stimulate innovative approaches to preventing research misconduct and promoting research integrity. ORI is especially interested in supporting conferences that lead to extramural grant applications on research on research integrity and peer-reviewed publications.