Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy

Conflicts of interest (COI) in the university context are receiving growing attention, but the focus has been largely on problematic financial COI arising from university-industry relations, which clearly need to be avoided. The result, unfortunately, is a pejorative perception of COI as being equiv...

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Main Author: Williams-Jones, Bryn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioéthiqueOnline 2013-04-01
Series:BioéthiqueOnline
Subjects:
Online Access:http://bioethiqueonline.ca/2/4
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spelling doaj-eb4d6a19e0b74e5cbccacb846d6b8f962020-11-25T00:30:19ZengBioéthiqueOnlineBioéthiqueOnline1923-27992013-04-0124Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of PolicyWilliams-Jones, BrynConflicts of interest (COI) in the university context are receiving growing attention, but the focus has been largely on problematic financial COI arising from university-industry relations, which clearly need to be avoided. The result, unfortunately, is a pejorative perception of COI as being equivalent to fraud and thus an issue of academic misconduct. In this paper, the aim is to show that while some financial and non-financial COI are particularly problematic and so should be avoided, many are pervasive and actually the norm in academia even if they are still largely ignored and misunderstood. Through a reflection on my own experiences as a university professor, I describe a diversity of common financial, non-financial and institutional COI of varying degrees of risk, that arise in the day-to-day activities of a professor, in order to then consider how these COI can and should be managed in practice. It is essential to attend to the full range of COI and to think about appropriate policies, procedures, or guidelines to prohibit some COI and mitigate the risks of others; but these “hard” mechanisms are only part of the solution. This paper will focus on elucidating the various “soft” mechanisms – such as education, self-awareness, humility, and dialogue (with colleagues, students, staff) – that can empower professors to manage those COI that cannot be prevented or avoided.http://bioethiqueonline.ca/2/4university professorsstudentsfinancialnon-financialconflicts of interestmanagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Williams-Jones, Bryn
spellingShingle Williams-Jones, Bryn
Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
BioéthiqueOnline
university professors
students
financial
non-financial
conflicts of interest
management
author_facet Williams-Jones, Bryn
author_sort Williams-Jones, Bryn
title Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
title_short Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
title_full Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
title_fullStr Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
title_full_unstemmed Professors and the Management of Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest: Don’t Always Need the Heavy Artillery of Policy
title_sort professors and the management of unavoidable conflicts of interest: don’t always need the heavy artillery of policy
publisher BioéthiqueOnline
series BioéthiqueOnline
issn 1923-2799
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Conflicts of interest (COI) in the university context are receiving growing attention, but the focus has been largely on problematic financial COI arising from university-industry relations, which clearly need to be avoided. The result, unfortunately, is a pejorative perception of COI as being equivalent to fraud and thus an issue of academic misconduct. In this paper, the aim is to show that while some financial and non-financial COI are particularly problematic and so should be avoided, many are pervasive and actually the norm in academia even if they are still largely ignored and misunderstood. Through a reflection on my own experiences as a university professor, I describe a diversity of common financial, non-financial and institutional COI of varying degrees of risk, that arise in the day-to-day activities of a professor, in order to then consider how these COI can and should be managed in practice. It is essential to attend to the full range of COI and to think about appropriate policies, procedures, or guidelines to prohibit some COI and mitigate the risks of others; but these “hard” mechanisms are only part of the solution. This paper will focus on elucidating the various “soft” mechanisms – such as education, self-awareness, humility, and dialogue (with colleagues, students, staff) – that can empower professors to manage those COI that cannot be prevented or avoided.
topic university professors
students
financial
non-financial
conflicts of interest
management
url http://bioethiqueonline.ca/2/4
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