Research integrity is essential for both the quality of scientific research and public trust in science.
Research integrity is essential for both the quality of scientific research and public trust in science.
It is for good reason that integrity is one of the Academy’s three core values. It promotes correct research practices through a wide range of activities:
Together with the Universities of the Netherlands (UNL) and the Dutch Research Council (NWO), the Academy pioneered the successive codes of conduct developed since the mid-1990s. These led also to the system of confidential counsellors and Research Integrity Committees (CWIs) that are currently in place at Dutch research institutes to deal with suspected violations of integrity.
Together with UNL and NOW, the Academy also set up the Netherlands Board on Research Integrity (LOWI), which provides for independent review of integrity procedures at affiliated institutions. LOWI's independent secretariat is housed at the Academy. The infographic provides information about the Dutch system for lodging a complaint about research integrity.
The Academy is one of the bodies that drafted the current Netherlands Code of Conduct for Research Integrity (NGWI 2018). This systematically sets out the principles underpinning research integrity, the standards for good research practices based on those principles, and the appropriate measures in the event of non-compliance. One difference to previous codes is an emphasis on the responsibility of research institutions. Institutions’ duty of care concerns not only the careful handling of integrity complaints but also the prevention of scientific misconduct and the creation of a working environment that fosters honest research practice.
The Code was explicitly designed as a dynamic document that can be updated when scientific and/or societal developments demand it. A review of the current Code will take place in the course of 2023. A committee will assess the extent to which the Code meets the current requirements for such a code on the part of science and society. The committee has also been asked to make specific recommendations for improvement if revision seems necessary. The evaluation is being conducted partly at the request of the Minister of Education, Culture and Science.
The Academy, Netherlands Federation of University Medical Centres (NFU), Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), Associated Applied Research Institutes (TO2), Netherlands Association of Universities of Applied Sciences (VH), and the Association of Universities in the Netherlands (VSNU) worked together to thoroughly amend and expand 'the Code' that has been in use since 2004.
View publicationA specific integrity issue addressed by the Academy is conflicts of interest. An increasing amount of research is commissioned by, or takes place in collaboration with, industry, public authorities, and civil society organisations. Science benefits from this, but close collaboration means that researchers at various levels may become entangled with those parties, and researchers may have conflicting interests among themselves.
Together with the Health Council of the Netherlands, the Federation of Medical Specialists, the Royal Dutch Medical Association, and the Dutch College of General Practitioners, the Academy has drawn up a code on dealing with such conflicts of interest. The organisations that have signed it believe that interests should be made clear and verifiable so as to prevent improper influence through conflicts of interest. The interests of experts serving on a scientific project group or advisory committee can be disclosed by means of the declaration of interests attached to the Code.
Whan providing advice, the Academy always complies with the provisions of the Code. To ensure the reliability and authority of its advisory reports, the Academy requires all members of the advisory committees that it establishes to sign a declaration of interests.
The Academy also strives to promote research integrity internationally. As a member of the All European Academies (ALLEA), it is also the co-author of the European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. The most recent version has been published in June 2023.
Various other international organisations to which the Academy is affiliated or with which it collaborates are also committed to promoting correct research practices: