The idea was floated by the Commons Science and Technology Committee in its report on peer review, published in July.
The committee expressed concern at the lack of a body to provide 鈥渁dvice and support to research employers and assurance to research funders across all disciplines鈥 鈥 as well as to ensure that research organisations were 鈥渄oing the right thing鈥 in terms of policing research integrity.
But, in its response to the report, published today, the government says it is 鈥渘ot minded鈥 to set up such a body.
It expresses support, instead, for the 鈥渃oncordat鈥, currently being drawn up by research funders and Universities UK.
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The concordat, which is due to be published in November, will set out principles of research integrity to which all research institutions will be expected to sign up.
The government says these should include a commitment 鈥渢o deal with research integrity in an open and transparent manner鈥.
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鈥淭here are already a number of regulatory and licensing bodies in key areas of research, and, therefore, any new regulatory body would increase regulatory burden on employers, and risks causing unnecessary overlap and uncertainty,鈥 it adds.
In its separate response, RCUK says that it 鈥渇elt unable鈥 to implement recommendation of a panel it convened last year, the Research Integrity Futures Working Group, to support a generic Research Integrity Service.
It cites reasons of cost, the need for a 鈥渕ore careful separation鈥 between advisory and policing functions, and disagreement about how best to carry out such policing.
RCUK funding for the existing Research Integrity Office has been withdrawn, though the organisation continues to operate.
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RCUK says the concordat will 鈥渞epresent an aspirational framework鈥 that will coexist with existing assurance mechanisms.
Institutions will have a 鈥渞esponsibility to monitor and evaluate鈥 its adoption.
But if it proves insufficient to provide 鈥渁ssurance and consistency鈥 across work funded by the research councils, 鈥渁dditional measures鈥 may be introduced.
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