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Description
Authorship allocation can be a source of tension in collaborative research. Even in healthy teams, misunderstandings may arise when authorship is not discussed early and transparently. This webinar explores the role institutions can play in supporting ethical authorship practices and resolving authorship disputes. Attendees will learn about evidenced-based resources others can adapt, including an institutional authorship policy and dispute resolution procedures, online authorship ethics training courses for students and faculty, and an authorship agreement form that guides collaborators through a detailed authorship conversation for a research project. By implementing these tools, institutions can foster a healthy collaborative authorship culture.
Audience
Postdocs, Research Personnel, Researchers, Students
Meet the Presenters
Elise Demeter, PhD – University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Dr. Demeter is the Director of Academic Research and Assessment at UNC Charlotte. She serves as the evaluator of an NSF grant, “Fostering a Culture of Openness and Transparency with Institutional Authorship Policies University of North Carolina at Charlotte” and has presented on authorship ethics at national and international meetings.
Lisa M. Rasmussen, PhD – University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Lisa Rasmussen serves as editor-in-Chief of Accountability in Research and Co-Editor of the book series Philosophy and Medicine (Springer). She is also the Co-PI on a 5-year NSF-supported grant, “Fostering Openness and Transparency with Institutional Authorship Policies.”