Conflicts of interest in public policy research (2005)
| Venue: | In |
| Citations: | 2 - 1 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Maccoun05conflictsof,
author = {Robert J. Maccoun},
title = {Conflicts of interest in public policy research},
booktitle = {In},
year = {2005},
publisher = {University Press}
}
OpenURL
Abstract
Abstract: In this essay, I discuss the difficulty of sustaining an inquisitorial system of policy research and analysis when it is embedded in a broader adversarial political setting. Conflicts of interest in public policy research exist on a continuum from blatant pecuniary bias to more subtle ideological bias. Because these biases are only partially susceptible to correction through individual effort and existing institutional practices (peer review, replication), I consider whether a more explicitly adversarial system might be preferable to the awkward hybrid that exists today. But there are important disanalogies between policy-relevant empirical debates and the kinds of conflicts we address with our adversarial legal system. If we are stuck with a muddled inquisitorial-adversarial hybrid, we need to encourage norms of “heterogeneous inquisitorialism, ” in which investigators strive for within-study hypothesis competition and greater clarity about roles, facts, and values. THE VARIETIES OF CONFLICT OF INTEREST In public policy research, as in other domains of professional life, conflicts of interest (henceforth, COIs) are legion. Most policy researchers can readily provide many personal war stories from their professional experience. Generically, the most blatant cases tend to fall into four categories: 1. Investigators with a commercial or proprietary interest in the research outcome, or the use of funding from sources with a commercial or proprietary interest in the research







