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Scientists oppose retractions for racism, sexism and fraud

Poll of researchers finds little support for pulling scholarly papers of those found guilty of objectionable personal behaviour

三月 28, 2024
The Gate of Honour at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, spray painted with the with words 'Eugenics is genocide. Fisher must fall' by activists calling for the college to remove its memorial window to Ronald Fisher
Source: Alamy
The Gate of Honour at Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, spray painted with the with words 'Eugenics is genocide. Fisher must fall' by activists calling for the college to remove its memorial window to Ronald Fisher

Scientists are strongly opposed to the retraction of articles by authors who have committed sexual harassment or financial misconduct, or have made racist remarks, according to a survey.

To examine attitudes towards retractions for non-academic reasons, researchers at the University of Southern Mississippi asked 464 academics whether an author should have their work pulled from the scientific literature if they had been found to have made racist or sexist comments towards a graduate student, or they had misused research funds.

In all cases, the respondents disagreed that these misdeeds should result in the loss of scientific papers, according to?an article published this month in the?.

However, the survey found higher levels of support for retracting work by those found guilty of grant funding misuse than for those who had made racist or sexist comments, though a clear majority were still opposed to retraction.

Speaking to?Times Higher Education, the study’s lead author, August Namuth, a graduate assistant at his university’s Office for Research Integrity, said the elevated level of support for retraction for financial fraud?might be because participants “inferred that if the researcher was willing to engage in financially fraudulent behaviour with grant money, they may be more willing to engage in actual research misconduct that would undermine the validity of the research findings”.

The study follows the removal of several scholarly articles for extra-scientific reasons in recent years, with papers pulled from the literature after it emerged that authors had been convicted of murder, sexual assault?or possessing indecent images of children. A paper was removed from a leading engineering journal in 2017 after one of its authors was??known for making antisemitic comments who had subsequently returned to academia.

Academics’ reticence to retract work produced by those with objectionable characters was probably because they?were “formally and informally trained to judge work solely on its quality”, said Mr Namuth, who also pointed to “very formal guidelines” from the Council on Publication Ethics that “emphasise research should only be retracted if the veracity of the findings?is seriously compromised or called into question”.

But it?might also reflect a “cost-benefit analysis” on behalf of scientists willing to accept high-quality science even if it was pioneered by those with objectionable views or characters, he added.

If scientists had sought, for example, to remove the work of the famous 20th-century British statistician Ronald Fisher on the grounds that he was an??this would have “served to significantly slow the pace of reliably evaluating scientific findings”.

Many of these determinations on how to use work from such individuals “may boil down to a cost-benefits analysis that can vary from person to person”, Mr Namuth said.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (2)

why is a completely non-representative survey of less than 500 worthy of any publicity at all? Can anyone explain that? It matters a great deal
"f scientists had sought, for example, to remove the work of the famous 20th-century British statistician Ronald Fisher on the grounds that he was an “outspoken eugenicist”, this would have “served to significantly slow the pace of reliably evaluating scientific findings”" This is ridiculous. Fisher was not writing at a time that these issues were pressing. Come on! Historical context matters
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