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Where the Rubber Meets the Road: Aligning IRBs and ResearchPractice
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 June 2008
Extract
In recent years, there has been increased discussion and even debate about how toreconcile a commitment to the ethical conduct of research in the social and behavioralsciences with a regulatory apparatus for the protection of human subjects that seems toooften to fall short of its own aspirations and ideals. The gap between regulations and theirimplementation whether at the federal, state, or local levels is typically grist for themill in political science. When, however, the issues are more in our own backyard—in ouracademic and research institutions—insight, interventions, and even empirical study areharder to come by. The purpose of this essay is neither to applaud what is right nor todecry what is wrong with the current system for the protection of human subjects aspracticed. Our goal is to help further catalyze through this PS symposium aconversation about the need to produce system reform, illustrate some readily doable stepsfor doing so, and entice social science colleagues to work at their own institutions and ata national level for system change.
- Type
- Symposium—Protecting Human Research Participants, IRBs, and Political Science Redux
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The American Political Science Association 2008
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