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Research ethics in Japanese higher education: faculty attitudes and cultural mediation

Research ethics in Japanese higher education: faculty attitudes and cultural mediation
Research ethics in Japanese higher education: faculty attitudes and cultural mediation
Principles of research ethics, derived largely from Western philosophical thought, are spreading across the world of higher education. Since 2006 the Japanese Ministry of Education has required universities in Japan to establish codes of ethical conduct and ensure that procedures are in place to punish research misconduct. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 13 academics in a research-intensive university in Japan, this paper considers how research ethics is interpreted in relation to their own practice. Interviewees articulated a range of ethical issues connected with data gathering and interpretation, applying for and using research funds, relationships with peers and research subjects, and the dissemination of results. The paper also explores the effect of personal values and cultural norms on the Japanese interpretation of research ethics identifying the impact in terms of the treatment of graduate research students and decision-making processes
1570-1727
181-195
Macfarlane, Bruce
3e2b9eb0-1772-4642-bb51-ab49cc5b748c
Saitoh, Yoshiko
fbfce921-86ff-419d-903c-c96abe8de970
Macfarlane, Bruce
3e2b9eb0-1772-4642-bb51-ab49cc5b748c
Saitoh, Yoshiko
fbfce921-86ff-419d-903c-c96abe8de970

Macfarlane, Bruce and Saitoh, Yoshiko (2008) Research ethics in Japanese higher education: faculty attitudes and cultural mediation. Journal of Academic Ethics, 6 (3), 181-195. (doi:10.1007/s10805-008-9065-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Principles of research ethics, derived largely from Western philosophical thought, are spreading across the world of higher education. Since 2006 the Japanese Ministry of Education has required universities in Japan to establish codes of ethical conduct and ensure that procedures are in place to punish research misconduct. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with 13 academics in a research-intensive university in Japan, this paper considers how research ethics is interpreted in relation to their own practice. Interviewees articulated a range of ethical issues connected with data gathering and interpretation, applying for and using research funds, relationships with peers and research subjects, and the dissemination of results. The paper also explores the effect of personal values and cultural norms on the Japanese interpretation of research ethics identifying the impact in terms of the treatment of graduate research students and decision-making processes

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Published date: 17 September 2008
Organisations: Southampton Education School

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Local EPrints ID: 373894
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/373894
ISSN: 1570-1727
PURE UUID: 83a86a28-e81b-43f4-9ebb-59a4eba21f41

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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2015 14:37
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:59

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Contributors

Author: Bruce Macfarlane
Author: Yoshiko Saitoh

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