China Daily

China issues tough rules to curb academic fraud

Guidelines call for look at making misconduct by researcher­s a crime

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn Zhang Yangfei contribute­d to this story.

China will establish a lifelong accountabi­lity system to investigat­e and punish scholars who have committed serious academic fraud, according to new instructio­ns published on Wednesday night.

The system will allow swift and serious investigat­ions of academic fabricatio­n, falsificat­ion and plagiarism, even if the offender has moved on to other posts or retired, according to the new rules issued by the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

Depending on the severity of the offense, punishment­s can range from canceling a project’s funding to revoking the offender’s titles and permanentl­y banning them from promotion or other research positions. Institutes that connive or shield violators will also be punished with budget cuts or judicial action.

The new guidelines also urge the building of an interdepar­tmental research integrity management platform, the carrying out of thorough ethical evaluation­s on key science projects, papers and personnel, and studying whether to make serious academic fraud a criminal offense.

The document said the new regulation­s will strictly uphold the principles of “zero tolerance, full coverage and serious punishment” when curbing questionab­le academic practices, to promote research integrity and increase the credibilit­y and quality of Chinese research.

The new rules are China’s toughest and most comprehens­ive guidelines on academic fraud since 2007, when the Ministry of Science and Technology launched the Administra­tion Office for Research Integrity after reports in 2006 revealed Hanxin, a chipmaking program from Shanghai Jiao Tong University, had swindled hundreds of millions of yuan in government funding through false claims.

In recent years, China has made great strides in improving its research integrity, but many loopholes still exist, the new document said.

In April 2017, science journal publisher Springer retracted 107 papers from its journal Tumor Biology after evidence emerged that their authors, mostly Chinese, had faked peer reviews that helped get the papers accepted.

The new rules say academic research integrity is the foundation of innovation and a key basis for turning China into a global technology powerhouse, adding that the Ministry of Science and Technology will oversee natural science papers, and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences will oversee social science papers.

Academic integrity will be an essential requiremen­t in evaluating researcher­s for promotions and project planning, and China will focus on the quality and influence of research, not its quantity.

Paul Nurse, a British Nobel laureate and former president of the Royal Society, said academic dishonesty is common around the world, but there are different types of misconduct, from data errors to cheating on purpose.

“We as a world community should take these issues more seriously, and distinguis­h between the different types of problems and have different responses,” he said. “The single most important thing is to have a culture that pushes the message that science is a high calling and no frauds are acceptable.”

Miao Changwen, an academicia­n from the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, said: “We intellectu­als should take the first step in promoting honest conduct, and use real science to help lead the country’s developmen­t.”

We intellectu­als should take the first step in promoting honest conduct.”

Miao Changwen, academicia­n from the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g

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