Handbook of research ethics and scientific integrity
著者
書誌事項
Handbook of research ethics and scientific integrity
(Springer reference)
Springer, c2020
- v. 2
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注記
"With 22 figures and 25 tables"
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This handbook is a 'one-stop shop' for current information, issues and challenges in the fields of research ethics and scientific integrity. It provides a comprehensive coverage of research and integrity issues, both within researchers' 'home' discipline and in relation to similar concerns in other disciplines. The handbook covers common elements shared by disciplines and research professions, such as consent, privacy, data management, fraud, and plagiarism. The handbook also includes contributions and perspectives from academics from various disciplines, treating issues specific to their fields. Readers are able to quickly source the most comprehensive and up-to-date information, protagonists, issues and challenges in the field. Experienced researchers keen to assess their own perspectives, as well as novice researchers aiming to establish the field, will equally find the handbook of interest and practical benefit. It saves them a great deal of time in sourcing the disparate available material in these fields and it is the first 'port of call' for a wide range of researchers, research advisors, funding agencies and research reviewers.The most important feature is the handbook's ability to provide practical advice and guidance to researchers in a wide range of disciplines and professions to help them 'think through' their approach to difficult questions related to the principles, values and standards they need to bring to their research practice.
目次
Introduction - Overview of the field: Ron Iphofen (< 8,000 words)
Regulating Research (covering how research is 'overseen', checked for ethics and findings 'managed') (11)
1. Regulating Research (Robert Dingwall, Independent Consultant, Emeritus Prof., Nottingham University)
2. Research Governance
3. Ethics Codes and Guidelines (Nathan Emmerich, Queens University, Belfast)
4. Research Ethics Review Systems: IRBs, REC, and REBs (David Hunter, Flinders University, Australia)
5. Research Integrity (James Parry, Head of UKRIO)
6. Publication Ethics (Ginny Barbour, Chair of Committee on Publication Ethics, COPE)
7. Peer Review (A journal editor from COPE)
8. Plagiarism
9. Research Fraud
10. Retraction (A journal editor from COPE)
11. The Global Position (Mark Israel, AHRECS, Australia)
Disciplines and Professions (This would cover 'Ethics and Integrity in'... each named discipline) (21)
12. Sociology
13. Psychology (John Oates, OU, UK)
14. Lifesciences (Francois Hirsch, INSERM, Paris)
15. Anthropology
16. Criminology
17. Education
18. Politics (Phil Sooben, CEO Political Studies Association)
19. History
20. Art
21. Literature
22. Economics
23. Physics
24. Chemistry
25. Engineering
26. Nanotechnology (Costas Charitidis, National Technical University of Athens, Greece)
27. Business/Management Studies (Paul t'Hart, Dept of Management/Business Studies, U of Utrecht)
28. Medicine
29. Nutritional Science (T. Colin Campbell, Cornell University, USA)
30. Sport and Exercise Science
31. Transport (UITP, Brussels)
32. Travel (Simon Reeve, BBC, UK)
33. Musicology (Simon Frith, Observer music critic and Chair of Mercury Prize)
Key Topics in Research Ethics (These are the conventional issues that crop up both in review and in the field.) (9)
34. Informed Consent
35. Privacy
36. Security
37. Benefit sharing - research with LMICs (Doris Schroeder, UCLAN, Melbourne, Cyprus)
38. Internet and social media (Charles Ess, U of Oslo)
39. Deception
40. Data Protection (Tobias Schulte in den Baumen, Germany)
41. Intellectual Property Rights (U of Leuven
42. Place hacking/psychogeography
Research Methods (Distinct research methods raise some overlapping but some unique issues.) (8)
43. Data sharing and data archiving (Libby Bishop, UK Data Archive)
44. Big Data
45. Ethnography (Paul Atkinson and Sara Delamont, U. Cardiff, UK)
46. Survey Methods and Questionnaires
47. Experimental Methods
48. Observational Studies
49. Creative Methods (Helen Kara, Independent Researcher, UK)
50. Online: Internet and Social Media (Kandy Woodfield, formerly NatCen and HEA, UK)
Subjects and Participants (Different subjects/participants raise different concerns in terms of how they are accessed, recruited and 'treated' before, during and after the research engagement.) (12)
51. Research with and on non-human animals (Peter Singer or recommendation - or someone from the non-human animal rights organisation - Australia/USA)
52. Participant Action Research/Community Engagement (Sarah Banks, Durham, UK)
53. Inclusion and Exclusion of subjects
54. Vulnerability (Will van den Hoonaard, U of New Brunswick, Canada)
55. Researcher Safety
56. Researching the Armed Forces (Simon Kolstoe, U of Portsmouth, UK)
57. Research with children and young people (John Oates, OU, UK)
58. Research with older people (Fiona Poland, UEA, UK)
59. People with disability (Anne Good, National Disability Authority, Ireland)
60. Research with indigenous peoples (Martin Tolich, Dunedin, New Zealand)
61. 'Hard-to-reach' groups (Lisa Grazina Johnston, Independent Consultant statistician/epidemiologist, USA)
62. LGBI research (Efrain Gutierrez, American Evaluation Association, Seattle, USA)
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