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A New Age for Grant Writing
By
Richard L. Austin
Associate Professor
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
In recent years, the feverish pitch in the search for funds has
created a dangerous behavior called “grant getting.” Finding
monies through grants has led many a fund seeker to shortcut the
proposal process by “cutting and pasting” words and phrases on
a grant application without regard to where the information came from.
The focus has been on getting the grant, and nothing else. This “grant
getting” behavior will have to change, however, or the
consequences could be severe. The age of intellectual property in a
grant application - and the need to protect it - is here.
The new age for grant writing will dawn on December 6, 2001 with a
new federal policy on “misconduct” in research - which includes
plagiarism in grant applications. It will shine a new light on those
who write and ask for money - and it will change the fundamentals of
fund raising forever. It helps protect the intellectual property of
creative grant writing and it punishes those who ask for money while
using someone else’s words and phrases without permission.
The new policy has been issued by the Office of Science and
Technology Policy and will impact everyone that writes a grant. It is
rooted in The National Science Foundation Act of 1950 and, while quite
simple in its intent, is far reaching in its impact on fund raising.
The policy formalizes misconduct in federally funded research projects
“as fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism in proposing,
performing, or reviewing research, or in reporting research results.”
The risks now facing those that write grants for federal funding -
their institutions, their organizations, and their disciplines, after
December 6 - are extreme. The changes the new policy brings to the
fund raising process outside of the federal funding arena are equally
overwhelming.
The new policy is more than the policing of grant proposals and
projects - it is a long needed safeguard for grant writers. It is a
realistic and manageable way to protect the intellectual property in
grant applications, and it will help reduce duplicate funding by
identifying already used proposals and ideas.
It is very important to everyone that the integrity of scientific
research and the fund raising process be protected. It is just as
important to issue scarce resources wisely and avoid duplication
whenever possible. The new misconduct policy will results in more
recipients receiving more available funds from more sources. In this
time of dwindling revenues and scarce resources for grants, everyone
will win.
Strict Definitions
One of the main reasons for the new policy is the basic survival of
federally funded projects: “advances in science, engineering, and
all fields of research depend on the reliability of the research
record, as do the benefits associated with them in areas such as
health and national security. Sustained public trust in the research
enterprise also requires confidence in the research record and in the
processes involved in its ongoing development.” Without these
inherent safeguards, federal research as we know it could be lost
forever. Under the new policy:
1. Research will include “all basic, applied, and
demonstration research in all fields of science, engineering, and
mathematics. This includes, but is not limited to, research in
economics, education, linguistics, medicine, psychology, social
sciences, statistics, and research involving human subjects or
animals.”
2. Fabrication will be “making up data or results and
recording or reporting them,” while falsification is “manipulating
research materials, equipment, or processes, or changing or omitting
data or results such that the research is not accurately represented
in the research record.”
3. The research record will mean “the record of data or
results that embody the facts resulting from scientific inquiry, and
includes, but is not limited to, research proposals, laboratory
records, both physical and electronic, progress reports, abstracts,
theses, oral presentations, internal reports, and journal articles.”
4. Plagiarism becomes “the appropriation of another
person's ideas, processes, results, or words without giving
appropriate credit” but allows for honest errors or differences of
opinion.
5. Research institution includes “all organizations using
federal funds for research, including, for example, colleges and
universities, intramural federal research laboratories, federally
funded research and development centers, national user facilities,
industrial laboratories, or other research institutes.”
Independent researchers and small research institutions are covered by
the policy as well.
What Is At Risk
First and foremost at risk to a grant writer is the loss of an
awarded grant from the respective federal agency (or possibly the
return of the funds to the agency, even after they have been
expended). Along with the federal dollars lost in the grant will
be any matching private funds achieved through the same application
process. The ability to receive future funding from the respective
federal agency - or any other co-sponsoring agency anywhere - will be
doubt.
The financial impact, however, multiplies even further if the grant
writer is at an educational or research institution. Gone will also be
funds for any research or teaching assistants; the loss of funds for
any new equipment covered by the grant; the loss of the indirect
benefits to the institution; and, the loss of the grant writer’s
reputation or maybe the institutional appointment as well. The
possibility of promotion or tenure may also be lost forever.
Preceding all of these massive tragedies, however, comes the
“investigative phase” of the process where the institution or
organization must investigate the grant writer and a claim of
misconduct. (The key word here is “claim”, and an
investigation can be initiated simply by a colleague questioning the
misappropriation of words in a grant proposal or application, termed “
plagiarism”). Even if the result of the seemingly endless
investigative process (the extensive peer reviews, the outside
political scrutiny, and the governing board oversight) determines
the action to be only an “honest error or difference of opinion”,
the grant writer in question will be on everyone’s radar screen for a
long time to come.
The resources expended and the costs incurred to reach even a
benign conclusion after an exhaustive, time-consuming investigation
are not much less that those to conclude and report an action of “misconduct.”
Subsequently, if laws are found to have been broken by the grant
writer (such as an intellectual property violation via a copyright
infringement), the costs of remedies for these actions alone will
be even more staggering - to everyone in the equation.
If you are required to write grants to support your fund raising
efforts, ask yourself the following questions.
Does U.S. Copyright Law protect grant proposals?
Are grant proposals intellectual property?
Are grants written for financial gain?
Is re-using just a paragraph of someone else’s grant proposal
without permission misconduct?
Is the individual grant writer subject to financial penalties
if the copyright law is violated?
Can your institution or organization also be subjected to
financial penalties for the plagiarism of a grant proposal?
Could a grant proposal be rejected because of citations from
other proposals?
It is best for a grant writer to err on the side of caution when
completing an application - especially those projects based on
excessive “cutting and pasting.” Here’s why:
Question 1: Does U.S. Copyright Law protect grant proposals?
Answer - Yes: Copyright is a protection that covers
published and unpublished literary, scientific and artistic works,
whatever the form of expression, provided such works are fixed in a
tangible or material form. A previously written grant proposal,
awarded or not, is in fixed form. Just because your grant is for
research at an educational institution or may serve an educational
purpose in a non-profit organization does not exempt it from copyright
infringement.
Question 2: Are grant proposals intellectual property?
Answer - Yes: Someone, somewhere created the original
proposal and fixed it in tangible or material form. If a written
proposal or funded grant (or any portion of the material) can be seen,
heard, touched, read or in someway put to paper - it is someone’s
intellectual property.
Question 3: Are grants written for financial gain?
Answer - Yes: Of course they are. And here lies the
problem for grant writers as well as the organizations receiving the
funds. Grants are written and submitted for money that is often shared
among a number of recipients. If the grant is a violation of a law
then everyone that benefits from the project can be at risk for
financial penalties - including the granting agency or foundation!
Question 4: Is re-using just a paragraph of someone else’s grant
proposal without permission misconduct?
Answer - Yes: Re-use of any portion of the grant
proposal (including a simple paragraph) - especially for financial
gain - requires permission from the original grant writer (the
property owner). Make sure you have the permission in writing!
Question 5: Is the individual grant writer subject to financial
penalties if the copyright law is violated?
Answer - Yes: Responding to an inquiry about the work
from the original proposal owner (or their attorney) is very costly
for a grant writer as well as their institution, often into the tens
of thousands of dollars. If an investigation determines a grant writer
could possibly be associated with misconduct and a broken law,
anything can happen - and probably will.
Question 6: Can your institution or organization also be subjected
to financial penalties for the plagiarism of a grant proposal?
Answer - Yes: Any member of the equation from the grant
writer to the recipients of any portion of the funds can be part of
the liability loop. Even a journal publisher could be held liable for
publishing protected research results developed from funds gained
through misconduct!
Question 7: Could a grant proposal be rejected because of citations
from other proposals?
Answer - Yes, probably! (The waters have yet to be fully
tested on this one, however.): Funding a proposal written with
intellectual property not belonging to the grant writer will be very
rare, and impractical for many granting agencies and organizations -
especially non-federal sources.
Reducing the Risks
For the individual grant writer:
- DO NOT plagiarize in a grant proposal or on an application for
funding. It’s that simple. Create the material yourself. If you can’t,
at least cite every source and get written permission to re-use the
material.
- DO NOT re-use previously funded proposals without written
permission from the original property owner, the organization that
funded the project and the organization that received the funds.
Successful applications will be especially scrutinized for
infringement actions because these are the most valuable to re-use.
- NEVER fabricate or falsify research results or reports to a
funding agency. The odds of a jealous colleague somewhere questioning
your report is quite good.
- NEVER assume that your work is for educational purposes and
therefore exempt from the Copyright Law. It isn’t.
- NEVER assume, because you cut and paste information from the
Internet, that it is automatically public domain. It’s NOT!
For research centers, organizations, societies and universities:
- Develop a grant writing policy and guidelines for your faculty to
fulfill when writing a grant proposal - and enforce it!
- Maintain an internal database of all proposals, abstracts and
reports and check them for re-use (plagiarism), correct
citations and written permissions - before they leave the department
or lab.
- At the research center or university level, proposals, abstracts
and reports should be checked once again for re-used materials before
they are reviewed by outside peers or a governing board.
- At the organization/society level, have a database available for
members to “crosscheck” applications, proposals, abstracts and reports
against different organizations and institutions.
- Journal or magazine editors should not allow project results to
be published - even abstracts - unless the body of work is checked for
plagiarism. Peer reviewers could assist substantially in this phase of
the process as well.
- At a superintendents or university funded projects office, check
ALL applications, proposals, abstracts, reports and peer reviews
against all faculties at the school or institution for protection of
their intellectual property. Share this capability among your peer
offices at other organizations as well.
For non-federal granting agencies:
(The assumption is made here that federal granting agencies are
exempt from lawsuits for intellectual property violations. Non-federal
funding sources are not exempt, however, and will need to protect
themselves from infringement challenges and claims of misconduct.)
- Develop a “plagiarism policy” (including penalties for
violations) for your funding program and make copies readily
available to everyone that asks you for money.
Protect yourself first.
- Screen ALL incoming proposals against previously submitted and/or
awarded materials. Awarding funds for the same proposal twice is
wasting precious resources.
- Consider using a third party screening service or develop an
in-house database for screening proposals, abstracts and reports
electronically with document analysis software. (Suggested links to
review services and software: FindSame.org,
www.wordchecksystems.com,
www.integriguard.com, www.canexus.com/eve/what-eve.html)
- Reject any research proposals containing duplicate funding
material or material without proper citations or written permissions.
Our friends at Napster just discovered what happens when copyright
infringement is facilitated without regard to the intellectual
property rights of the original owner. Kinko’s learned a similar
lesson just a decade earlier. Everyone now in the fund raising
equation should learn from this legacy of errors. The grant writing
landscape has changed. There is a new light shining on everyone. The
new age for fund raising and grant writing begins December 6, 2001.
Suggested Readings and Resources:
Buzzelli, Donald E., “The Definition of Misconduct in Science:
A View from NSF,” Science, 29 January 1993, Volume 259, pp.
584-585, 647-648.
Federal Register: December 6, 2000, Volume 65, Number 235, pgs.
76260-76264.
On Being A Scientist: Responsible Conduct In Research:
Misconduct In Science, www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/obas/contents/misconduct.html.
Web Site: http://www.ostp.gov/html/001207_3.html
Web Site: http://counsel.cua.edu/FEDLAW/Nsf.htm
Richard L. Austin is an Associate Professor at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln. He teaches Grant Writing and Fund Raising at the
graduate level and is a consultant to book publishers, private
foundations and intellectual property attorneys on the measurement of
intellectual property infringement. He can be reached at
raustin1@unl.edu if you have
questions or comments on the materials appearing in this article.
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