• Sci Eng Ethics · Sep 2009

    Comment

    Scientific self-regulation-so good, how can it fail? Commentary on "The problems with forbidding science".

    • Patrick L Taylor.
    • Harvard Medical School, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, MA 02115, USA. Patrick.Taylor@Childrens.Harvard.edu
    • Sci Eng Ethics. 2009 Sep 1;15(3):395-406.

    AbstractTo be a functional alternative to government regulation, self-regulation of science must be credible to both scientists and the public, accountable, ethical, and effective. According to some, serious problems continue in research ethics in the United States despite a rich history of proposed self-regulatory standards and oversight devices. Successful efforts at self-regulation in stem cell research contrast with unsuccessful efforts in research ethics, particularly conflicts of interest. Part of the cause for a lack of success in self-regulation is fragmented, disconnected oversight, and failure to embody genuine scientific and public consensus. To be accountable, credible and effective, self-regulation must be inclusive and multidisciplinary, publicly engaged, sufficiently disinterested, operationally integrated with institutional goals, and must implement a genuine consensus among scientists and the public. The mechanisms of self-regulation must be sufficiently broad in their oversight, and interconnected with other institutional forces and actors, that they do not create fragmented solutions.

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