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Bor Luen Tang – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2025
Laboratory safety regulations have been traditionally viewed by its learners and practitioners as a matter of law and policy, which simply requires compliance. A compliance mindset tends be passive and dissociates individuals (or even institutions) from the important reasons and principles underlying the safety rules and regulations, leading to…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Laboratory Safety, Ethics, Laws
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Gian Franco Borio; Ana Marina Dorismond; Stephen Robinson – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2025
This article deals with two key legal issues for study abroad (SA) in Europe, namely (i) the lack of a comprehensive and legislative definition of SA, and (ii) the need to shift from the concept of non-EU "student immigration" to that of student mobility. Italy is the only EU Member State to recognise and define SA, with the other 26 EU…
Descriptors: Student Mobility, Study Abroad, Foreign Students, Immigrants
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Taylor G. Hood; Xuyang He – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
Incorporating forensic applications into chemical education serves as an effective strategy for engaging college students and equipping them with the skills necessary to become valuable in the workforce in relevant fields. For instance, learning how to extract controlled substances from biological specimens in a laboratory course is essential for…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Law Enforcement, Science Instruction, Diagnostic Tests
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Olivier Leclerc – Research Evaluation, 2025
Detecting and punishing violations of research integrity requires first having to prove them. However, establishing proof of research misconduct presents a number of challenges. Firstly, it has to be conducted in a variety of contexts, including before research integrity officers, university disciplinary committees, civil courts, criminal courts,…
Descriptors: Cheating, Research, Identification, Integrity
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Olivier Leclerc; Nicolas Klausser – Research Ethics, 2025
Reporting and investigating research misconduct can lead to disciplinary proceedings being initiated, and ultimately to disciplinary sanctions being imposed on convicted scientists. The conversion of research misconduct findings into disciplinary sanctions is poorly understood. This article analyses all the disciplinary decisions handed down on…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Graduate Students, Researchers, Ethics
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Iris Duhn – Global Studies of Childhood, 2025
This article delves into the intricate relationship between children's rights and the broader landscape of human and more-than-human rights in times of planetary pluri-crises. While acknowledging the historical significance of the United Nation adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) as a late 20th-century milestone, this…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Climate, Children, Foreign Countries
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Duncan J. Mayer; Victor Groza – American Journal of Evaluation, 2025
The Nuremberg Code established ethics for the involvement of humans in research, initially in the area of health and medical research. While aspects of the code have been extended to the social and behavioral sciences, program evaluation does not always implement those policies, procedures, and protocols for protecting research participants,…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Trauma, Participatory Research, Guidelines
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Pia Seidler Cort; Anne Larson; Samira Harjula; Mira Kalalahti; Kristina Mariager-Anderson; Minna Vilkman – Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy, 2025
Transnational organizations like the OECD and the EU have, for many years, focussed on adult career guidance (ACG) as a policy for solving problems, especially those related to the labour market and labour market transitions. In this article, we take a closer look into the development of ACG policies in Finland and Denmark. Drawing on multiple…
Descriptors: Policy Analysis, Foreign Countries, Career Guidance, Labor Market
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Louise Campbell – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
Policy cycles are initiated via a variety of context-bound causal drivers. In situations where systemic reform is desired, agenda-setting is vital to this process. This paper examines 'The National Discussion on Scottish Education', which was a sequence of stakeholder engagements promoted as a listening exercise to enable policy agenda-setting for…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Agenda Setting, Position Papers, Strategic Planning