Concerns about the credibility of social science have increased calls for more transparency, but many academic incentives undermine individual efforts. Institutional changes are needed to substantially transform conventional practices. The authors present a series of specific actions that can be taken by different actors in social science knowledge production: journals, reviewers, professional organizations, teachers, universities and departments, funding sources, and data providers
Argues that informational arrangement may make an organization less of a cumbersome machine by exter...
Presentation at the Brookings Institution Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise...
The concept and phenomenon of transparency has for some time been subject to an increasingly broad a...
Social scientists should adopt higher transparency standards to improve the quality and credibility ...
Demands for greater transparency form an increasingly prevalent feature of many areas of organizatio...
Different institutional stakeholders play different roles in guiding the sharing of research data. F...
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.Modern governance is the produ...
In recent years, transparency has been proposed as the solution to, and the cause of, a remarkable r...
This review of the transparency literature has shown the evolution of the field through the prism of...
Proving public value can be an especially difficult task when high-profile cases of fraud in social ...
Although research funders wield enormous power over knowledge production and science policy, their d...
M.6761-2002 James E. Alt. ill. ; 30 cm. This paper is based on a seminar that he presented at the Ce...
Hybrid scientific fields consist of a collection of knowledge-producing and-utilising organisations,...
Transparency refers to the accuracy and extensiveness of the information provided to readers about t...
A hallmark of effective science is transparency. If results are not openly shared, or if others don\...
Argues that informational arrangement may make an organization less of a cumbersome machine by exter...
Presentation at the Brookings Institution Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise...
The concept and phenomenon of transparency has for some time been subject to an increasingly broad a...
Social scientists should adopt higher transparency standards to improve the quality and credibility ...
Demands for greater transparency form an increasingly prevalent feature of many areas of organizatio...
Different institutional stakeholders play different roles in guiding the sharing of research data. F...
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.Modern governance is the produ...
In recent years, transparency has been proposed as the solution to, and the cause of, a remarkable r...
This review of the transparency literature has shown the evolution of the field through the prism of...
Proving public value can be an especially difficult task when high-profile cases of fraud in social ...
Although research funders wield enormous power over knowledge production and science policy, their d...
M.6761-2002 James E. Alt. ill. ; 30 cm. This paper is based on a seminar that he presented at the Ce...
Hybrid scientific fields consist of a collection of knowledge-producing and-utilising organisations,...
Transparency refers to the accuracy and extensiveness of the information provided to readers about t...
A hallmark of effective science is transparency. If results are not openly shared, or if others don\...
Argues that informational arrangement may make an organization less of a cumbersome machine by exter...
Presentation at the Brookings Institution Replicability is at the core of the scientific enterprise...
The concept and phenomenon of transparency has for some time been subject to an increasingly broad a...