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On
Preventing Conflict of Interest in Government-Sponsored
Research at Universities
(A Joint Statement of The Council
of the American Association of University Professors and The American Council on Education)
The increasingly necessary and complex
relationships among universities, Government, and industry call for more
intensive attention to standards of procedure and conduct in
Government-sponsored research. The clarification and application of such
standards must be designed to serve the purposes and needs of the projects and
the public interest involved in them and to protect the integrity of the
cooperating institutions as agencies of higher education.
The government and institutions of higher
education, as the contracting parties, have an obligation to see that adequate
standards and procedures are developed and applied; to inform one another of
their respective requirements; and to assure that all individuals participating
in their respective behalf are informed of and apply the standards and
procedures that are so developed.
Consulting relationships between university
staff members and industry serve the interest of research and education in the
university. Likewise, the transfer of technical knowledge and skill from the
university to industry contributes to technological advance. Such relationships
are desirable, but certain potential hazards should be recognized.
A. Conflict Situations
1. Favoring of Outside Interests.
When a university staff member (administrator, faculty member, professional
staff member, or employee) undertaking or engaging in government-sponsored work
has a significant financial interest in, or a consulting arrangement with, a
private business concern, it is important to avoid actual or apparent conflicts
of interest between his/her government-sponsored university research obligations
and his/her outside interests and other obligations. Situations in or from which
conflicts of interest may arise are the:
a. Undertaking or orientation of the staff
member’s university research to serve the research or other needs of the
private firm without disclosure of such undertaking or orientation to the
university and to the sponsoring agency.
b. Purchase of major equipment,
instruments, materials, or other items for university research from the
private firm in which the staff member has the interest without disclosure of
such interest.
c. Transmission to the private firm or
other use for personal gain of government-sponsored work products, results,
materials, records, or information that are not made generally available.
(This would not necessarily preclude appropriate licensing arrangements for
inventions, or consulting on the basis of government-sponsored research
results where there is significant additional work by the staff member
independent of his government-sponsored research.)
d. Use for personal gain or other
unauthorized use of privileged information acquired in connection with the
staff member’s government-sponsored activities. (The term "privileged
information" includes, but is not limited to, medical, personnel, or
security records of individuals; anticipated material requirements or price
actions; possible new sites for government operations; and knowledge of
forthcoming programs or of selection of contractors or subcontractors in
advance of official announcements.)
e. Negotiation or influence upon the
negotiation of contracts relating to the staff member’s government-sponsored
research between the university and private organizations with which he/she
has consulting or other significant relationships.
f. Acceptance of gratuities or special
favors from private organizations with which the University does or may
conduct business in connection with a government-sponsored research project,
or extension of gratuities or special favors to employees of the sponsoring
government agency under circumstances that might reasonably be interpreted as
an attempt to influence the recipients in the conduct of their duties.
2. Distribution of Effort.
There are competing demands on the energies of a faculty member (for example,
research, teaching, committee work, outside consulting). The way in which
he/she divides his/her effort among these various functions does not raise
ethical questions unless the government agency supporting his/her research is
misled in its understanding of the amount of intellectual effort he/she is
actually devoting to the research in question. A system of precise time
accounting is incompatible with the inherent character of the work of a
faculty member, since the various functions he/she performs are closely
interrelated and do not conform to any meaningful division of a standard work
week. On the other hand, if the research agreement contemplates that a staff
member will devote a certain fraction of his/her effort to the
government-sponsored research, or he/she agrees to assume responsibility in
relation to such research, a demonstrable relationship between the indicated
effort or responsibility and the actual extent of his/her involvement is to be
expected. Each university, therefore, should—through joint consultation of
administration and faculty—develop procedures to assure that proposals are
responsibly made and complied with.
3. Consulting for Government Agencies or
Their Contractors. When the staff member engaged
in government-sponsored research also serves as a consultant to a Federal
agency, his/her conduct is subject to the provisions of the Conflict of Interest
Statutes (18 U.S.C. 202-209 as amended) and the president’s memorandum of May
2, 1963, Preventing Conflicts of Interest on the Part of Special Government
Employees. When he/she consults for one or more government contractors, or
prospective contractors, in the same technical field as his/her research
project, care must be taken to avoid giving advice that may be of questionable
objectivity because of its possible bearing on his/her other interests. In
undertaking and performing consulting services, he/she should make full
disclosure of such interests to the university and to the contractor insofar as
they may appear to relate to the work at the university or for the contractor.
Conflict of interest problems could arise, for example, in the participation of
a staff member of the university in an evaluation for the government agency or
its contractor of some technical aspect of the work of another organization with
which he/she has a consulting or employment relationship or a significant
financial interest, or in an evaluation of a competitor to such other
organization.
B. University Responsibility
Each university participating in
government-sponsored research should make known to the sponsoring government
agencies:
1. The steps it is taking to assure an
understanding on the part of the university administration and staff members of
the possible conflicts of interest or other problems that may develop in the
foregoing types of situations.
2. The organizational and administrative
actions it has taken or is taking to avoid such problems, including:
a. Accounting procedures to be used to
assure that government funds are expended for the purposes for which they have
been provided, and that all services that are required in return for these
funds are supplied.
b. Procedures that enable it to be aware of
the outside professional work of staff members participating in
government-sponsored research, if such outside work relates in any way to the
government-sponsored research.
c. The formulation of standards to guide
the individual university staff members in governing their conduct in relation
to outside interests that might raise questions of conflicts of interest.
d. The provision within the university of
an informed source of advice and guidance to its staff members for advance
consultation on questions they wish to raise concerning the problems that may
or do develop as a result of their outside financial or consulting interests,
as they relate to their participation in government-sponsored university
research. The university may wish to discuss such problems with the
contracting officer or other appropriate government official in those cases
that appear to raise questions regarding conflicts of interest.
The above process of disclosure and
consultation is the obligation assumed by the university when it accepts
government funds for research. The process must, of course, be carried out in a
manner that does not infringe on the legitimate freedoms and flexibility of
action of the university and its staff members that have traditionally
characterized a university. It is desirable that standards and procedures of the
kind discussed be formulated and administered by members of the university
community themselves, through their joint initiative and responsibility, for it
is they who are the best judges of the conditions that can most effectively
stimulate the search for knowledge and preserve the requirements of academic
freedom. Experience indicates that such standards and procedures should be
developed and specified by joint administrative-faculty action.
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