1st Edition
Researching with Integrity The Ethics of Academic Enquiry
@contents:TABLE OF CONTENTS Pages
Foreword by Stephen Rowland v-vi
Preface vii
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction
Part A: From principles to virtue
1: The legacy of Nuremberg
2: Challenging principles
3: Developing integrity
Part B: Living the virtues
4: Courage
5: Respectfulness
6: Resoluteness
7: Sincerity
8: Humility
9: Reflexivity
Part C: Integrating integrity
10: The performative culture
11: Learning about virtue
12: The good professor
Bibliography
Index
Narrative index Page
4.1 Crossing the boundary 71
- The complexities of ‘confidentiality’
- Experimenting with the environment
- Interviewing the vulnerable
- Permissions and pressure
- The ethics of attraction
6.1 Repeating the experiment
6.2 Slow progress
- Trusting the proof
- Trimming the data
- A tempting citation
- Getting the order right
- Credit where credit is due
- Politics and personalities
- The agreeable interviewer
Biography
Bruce Macfarlane is Professor of Higher Education at the University of Portsmouth (UK) where he is also Head of Academic Development. His previous books include Teaching with Integrity and The Academic Citizen. He is a Vice Chair of the Society for Research into Higher Education.
"A good question, posed every year across the country, is: ‘Why do we have to complete these stupid IRB procedures?’. . .Bruce Macfarlane’s most recent monograph on research ethics provides a very concrete, historically accurate answer, at least to the overt question of ‘why.’. . .The text is clear, brief and well grounded in history, philosophy, and research methodologies."—Review of Higher Education






