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Research ethics

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Here is a list of the latest articles

Manipulation equipment

Developing countries unprepared for research misconduct

Research into the extent of scientific misconduct in developing countries highlights the need to combat it, say researchers.

11 April 2013 | EN | ES

Golden rice trial triggers sackings, investigation

Chinese researchers who fed GM rice to children in an unapproved trial have been fired, and a US university is investigating the study.

7 January 2013 | EN | 中文

Publicaciones científicas

Mexico: Researchers fired over manipulation of scientific images

Two researchers from the National Autonomous University of Mexico were fired from their positions due to tampering with scientific images.

17 December 2012 | ES

Drug factory, Ethiopia

Mixed results for big pharma work on drug access, R&D

The world's largest drug firms have increased spending on drug access in developing countries, but face questions over clinical trial ethics.

30 November 2012 | EN | ES

Biblioteca de la Universidad de York

Fraud the ‘main cause’ for retraction of scientific papers

Fraud, duplications, and plagiarism in scientific papers are the most common reasons for retracting publications, a study has found.

13 November 2012 | ES

Nautilus plans to mine sediments from underwater hydrothermal vents

Review claims 'poor science' in deep-sea mining report

The environmental threats posed by the world's first deep-sea mining project may have been poorly assessed, says a campaign group review.

9 November 2012 | EN | FR

Farmer in India

Committee advises halt to Indian Bt crop trials

An expert panel, appointed by the Supreme Court of India, has recommended a ten-year moratorium on all Bt food crop trials.

22 October 2012 | EN

Scientist at work

Academies launch universal guide to curb misconduct

With the research boom making science misconduct more common, the time has come for universal guidelines, say academicians.

19 October 2012 | EN | ES | FR

A woman carrying cassava

GM cassava study retracted over 'missing' data

A study that claimed to boost cassava's protein content has been retracted after the research team found they could not repeat its results.

26 September 2012 | EN | ES

A road sign

Calls for more science research for peace

More can be done to use science for peacekeeping and peace-building in conflict zones, scientists say on the International Day of Peace.

21 September 2012 | EN

India tightens clinical trial regulations

India is planning tighter legislation to regulate clinical trials and expansion of its pool of experts in concerned medical fields.

12 September 2012 | EN

An agricultural researcher in Kenya

North-South collaboration helps researchers stay at home

Contrary to popular belief, North-South partnerships do not necessarily lead to brain drain in developing countries.

23 August 2012 | EN | ES | FR

A scientist in Thailand

Thai official in plagiarism dispute found guilty of forgery

Thailand's academic credibility has been put in the spotlight again, with opinion divided over a government official's forgery conviction.

21 August 2012 | EN

Female researchers in Zanzibar

Research metrics penalise part-time women researchers

Scientists have used an analogy between ecosystems and academia to reveal the institutional barriers that drive women out of research.

23 July 2012 | EN | ES

President Obiang

Controversial UNESCO science prize finally awarded

Three winners from Egypt, Mexico and South Africa have been awarded the long-delayed Obiang science award, amid continued criticism.

18 July 2012 | EN | ES | FR

Scientists 'need responsible research evaluations'

Incorporating ethical criteria into research proposals is crucial to making science more socially responsible, ESOF 2012 hears.

18 July 2012 | EN | ES

Kenyan research programme accused of discrimination

Former employees of the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme say their treatment was akin to "modern-day slavery".

Source: Nature

6 July 2012 | EN

A researcher takes a sample out of a refrigerated cabinet

African biosafety 'still neglected'

A lack of funding and training has created a culture of poor biosafety in much of Africa, a Johannesburg conference hears.

4 July 2012 | EN

Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, Thailand

Thai PhD withdrawal leads to calls to retract article

The head of the Thai innovation agency has had his PhD revoked for plagiarism, stirring calls for a further journal retraction.

29 June 2012 | EN

Researchers

Guidelines updated on research partnerships

Eleven ways to make research collaborations more productive and equitable are highlighted in revised 'KFPE' guide.

30 May 2012 | EN | FR