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SCOOP: Harvard's chief diversity officer, Sherri Ann Charleston, appears to have plagiarized extensively in her academic work, lifting large chunks of text without quotation marks and even taking credit for a study done by another scholar—her own husband.?https://t.co/Kqwj3srXo0
— Aaron Sibarium (@aaronsibarium) January 30, 2024
 According to Beacon, the overlap only suggested that the authors did not conduct new interviews for the later piece but instead relied on LaVar Charleston's interviews from 2012. This constitutes a severe breach of research ethics, experts who reviewed the allegations said. They added that Sherri Ann Charleston committed a "wide range of plagiaristic offenses, from minor plagiarism to possible data fraud and warrant an investigation."
"The 2014 paper appears to be entirely counterfeit," said Peter Wood, the head of the National Association of Scholars and a former associate provost at Boston University, where he ran several academic integrity probes. "This is research fraud pure and simple."
Papers that omit a few citations or quotation marks rarely receive more than a correction but when scholars recycle large chunks of a previous study without attribution, the duplicate paper is often retracted and can even violate copyright law, they added. Said offense, known as duplicate publication, is typically a form of self-plagiarism in which authors republish old work in a bid to pad their resumes. Here, though, the duplicate paper added two new authors, Sherri Ann Charleston and Jerlando Jackson, who had no involvement in the original, letting them claim credit for the research and making them party to the con.
This issue came on the heels of another plagiarism allegation from no less than the university president Claudine Gay, who recently resigned from her role after she was accused of committing multiple counts of plagiarism throughout her own career and being at the center of the school's recent antisemitism scandal. Critics argue that Charleston committed a worse "scholarly sin" than her former boss. (Related: Gay keeps $900K annual salary despite resigning as Harvard president after evidence of serial plagiarism emerges.)
According to Beacon, the overlap only suggested that the authors did not conduct new interviews for the later piece but instead relied on LaVar Charleston's interviews from 2012. This constitutes a severe breach of research ethics, experts who reviewed the allegations said. They added that Sherri Ann Charleston committed a "wide range of plagiaristic offenses, from minor plagiarism to possible data fraud and warrant an investigation."
"The 2014 paper appears to be entirely counterfeit," said Peter Wood, the head of the National Association of Scholars and a former associate provost at Boston University, where he ran several academic integrity probes. "This is research fraud pure and simple."
Papers that omit a few citations or quotation marks rarely receive more than a correction but when scholars recycle large chunks of a previous study without attribution, the duplicate paper is often retracted and can even violate copyright law, they added. Said offense, known as duplicate publication, is typically a form of self-plagiarism in which authors republish old work in a bid to pad their resumes. Here, though, the duplicate paper added two new authors, Sherri Ann Charleston and Jerlando Jackson, who had no involvement in the original, letting them claim credit for the research and making them party to the con.
This issue came on the heels of another plagiarism allegation from no less than the university president Claudine Gay, who recently resigned from her role after she was accused of committing multiple counts of plagiarism throughout her own career and being at the center of the school's recent antisemitism scandal. Critics argue that Charleston committed a worse "scholarly sin" than her former boss. (Related: Gay keeps $900K annual salary despite resigning as Harvard president after evidence of serial plagiarism emerges.)
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