Name of organisation
Durham University
Type of organisation:
higher education institution/industry/independent research performing organisation/other (please state)
Higher Education Institution
Date statement approved by governing body (DD/MM/YY)
5/12/2023
Web address of organisation’s research integrity page (if applicable)
https://www.durham.ac.uk/research/ethics--governance/
Named senior member of staff to oversee research integrity
Professor Colin Bain, pvc.research@durham.ac.uk
Named member of staff who will act as a first point of contact for anyone wanting more information on matters of research integrity
Catherine Brewer, research.policy@durham.ac.uk
Responsibilities for research integrity are set out in the Policy and Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. An updated version of this policy, together with an updated Research Misconduct Policy, was approved and published in October 2022. The University also has supporting policies on specific aspects of research integrity, including Ethics in Research and Scholarship, Research Data Management, and Responsible Use of Metrics. Central services, including Research and Innovation Services and University Library, provide systems and guidance to support implementation of these policies.
The University provides a range of training, development and mentoring opportunities for researchers at different career stages. These include the Researcher Development Programme targeted to PGRs and ECRs, the Leading Researchers Programme for mid to late career researchers, online Research Integrity training modules (via Epigeum) and a range of tailored sessions and workshops on different aspects of research integrity.
Starting in 2021, the University dedicated additional resource to the development of a positive research culture, with the post of Deputy Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research) largely dedicated to research culture, and the appointment of a Research Culture Manager. This has resulted in the development of an overarching vision for Research Culture, Flourish@Durham, and a plan of investment and activity to achieve this vision.
Information about this work has been widely disseminated via a range of channels and routes are signposted for staff and students to provide feedback or raise concerns relating to culture or integrity. In addition, a range of workshops and surveys have enabled staff and students to provide feedback on matters relating to culture, support and training which has helped the University to identify and prioritise the activity to be undertaken.
This work is overseen by Research Culture Committee, a sub-committee of University Research Committee, who receive regular reports on activity relating to Flourish@Durham, as well as specific activities relating to the Concordat to Support the Career Development of Researchers and the Research Integrity Concordat.
A number of changes to policies and related processes and guidance have taken place in 2022/23. These include:
As part of the programme of work on research culture, during 2022/23 the University has introduced a number of initiatives to support research practice and researcher development. These include:
In addition, the University has undertaken a review of research training across the institution. Training is delivered by multiple departments and services across the institution, and the review identified the need for a consistent route for researchers to identify and access relevant opportunities, as well as identifying potential gaps and areas of overlap in current provision. Work in this area will continue into the next academic year. In the area of Research Integrity and Ethics, while the Epigeum modules provide an overview of key areas, the need for more tailored provision has been identified, and the University is in the process of developing a set of online courses targeted to different career stages and roles.
A number of other initiatives are looking at the development of research culture and supporting positive culture in the institution more broadly. These include
A key area of progress this year has been development of the Flourish@Durham research culture vision, which has in turn helped to focus and prioritise our areas of activity. In some cases, the emergence of new priorities from this work has meant that planned work identified in the previous report has been adjusted or has proceeded at a slower pace. There are currently several significant programmes of work relating to institutional culture more broadly, and this work also involves identifying ways of better integrating work on related initiatives.
Timescales for work involving academic colleagues has also been impacted by industrial action during this academic year, and timescales for system developments have been additionally impacted by delays in processes and technical complexities. Among the areas of development previously identified we have
Completed
Progressed
Priorities in the next year will be
An updated Research Misconduct Policy approved and published in October 2022. Next review is scheduled for 2024, however lessons learned in the course of recent cases and the publication of UKRIO’s update Research Misconduct Procedure means that review may take place earlier. Related policies include the Public Interest Disclosure Policy (Whistleblowing), last updated 2021 and the Staff Concerns Policy, which covers Bullying and Harassment as well as other concerns, approved in February 2022.
The Research Integrity Policy and Code of Good Practice highlights informal routes for raising potential issues of poor practice or inadvertent error, while also signposting the formal routes available where needed. Similarly, the ‘Staff Concerns Hub’ provides guidance on both informal and formal avenues for raising concerns, and supporting information for those involved in these processes, whether they are raising a concern, having a concern raised about them, or involved in a management role. In survey of our researchers in 2023, a majority of respondents indicated that they would feel comfortable reporting incidents of research misconduct.
While we have details on the policies and processes available online we are aware that we need to socialise this across the University to ensure our research community know how to report allegations of potential misconduct and this is part of our forward planning around integrity. This was reinforced in our recent survey where a number of respondants indicated that they were not familiar with the mechanisms for reporting misconduct should they ever need to do this.
Key lessons from research misconduct investigations carried out this year (none of which progressed beyond the informal investigation stage), include
Type of allegation
Number of allegations
Number of allegations reported to the organisation
Number of formal investigations
Number upheld in part after formal investigation
Number upheld in full after formal investigation
Fabrication
Falsification
Plagiarism
2
0
Failure to meet legal, ethical and professional obligations
Misrepresentation (e.g. data; involvement; interests; qualification; and/or publication history)
Improper dealing with allegations of misconduct
Multiple areas of concern (when received in a single allegation)
Other
Total:
4
N/A