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Book Cover for: Ethical Imperialism: Institutional Review Boards and the Social Sciences, 1965-2009, Zachary M. Schrag

Ethical Imperialism: Institutional Review Boards and the Social Sciences, 1965-2009

Zachary M. Schrag

A powerful indictment of the IRB regime.

University researchers in the United States seeking to observe, survey, or interview people are required first to complete ethical training courses and to submit their proposals to an institutional review board (IRB). Under current rules, IRBs have the power to deny funding, degrees, or promotion if their recommended modifications to scholars' proposals are not followed. This volume explains how this system of regulation arose and discusses its chilling effects on research in the social sciences and humanities.

Zachary M. Schrag draws on original research and interviews with the key shapers of the institutional review board regime to raise important points about the effect of the IRB process on scholarship. He explores the origins and the application of these regulations and analyzes how the rules--initially crafted to protect the health and privacy of the human subjects of medical experiments--can limit even casual scholarly interactions such as a humanist interviewing a poet about his or her writing. In assessing the issue, Schrag argues that biomedical researchers and bioethicists repeatedly excluded social scientists from rule making and ignored the existing ethical traditions in nonmedical fields. Ultimately, he contends, IRBs not only threaten to polarize medical and social scientists, they also create an atmosphere wherein certain types of academics can impede and even silence others.

The first work to document the troubled emergence of today's system of regulating scholarly research, Ethical Imperialism illuminates the problems caused by simple, universal rule making in academic and professional research. This short, smart analysis will engage scholars across academia.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publish Date: Sep 15th, 2017
  • Pages: 264
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.90in - 6.00in - 0.70in - 0.80lb
  • EAN: 9781421424026
  • Categories: ResearchHistoryUnited States - 20th Century

About the Author

Schrag, Zachary M.: - Zachary M. Schrag is a professor of history at George Mason University.

Praise for this book

This book ought to be required reading for those concerned about the political forces that make our work possible, and sometimes not possible at all.
--Susan B. Reverby, American Historical Review
Exhaustively researched, drawing on . . . a wide array of sources.
--Donald N. Bersoff, PsycCRITIQUES
I highly recommended this book for its contribution to the discussion of academic freedom, social science research, and the regulation of research ethics.
--Ellen Marakowitz, AAUP: Regulated Research
Ethical Imperialism is a remarkable accomplishment and a must-read for researchers and policy makers. It persuasively weaves together the scholarly, disciplinary, regulatory, and bureaucratic strands that account for today's 'omnipresent threat' to social research.
--Canadian Journal of Sociology
[A]n impressive assessment of IRBs, from their tenuous beginnings in the early 1960s as a practical response to a perceived threat to the public from medical research to [their] present status as a threat to academic freedom in the social sciences . . . [A] significant contribution to those oral historians and related practitioners who would seek to challenge IRB's right and ability to adequately evaluate their research projects, particularly before the research has been conducted.
--Oral History Review
A valuable contribution to the history of federal science policy and a useful critique of a system ill-suited to the uses to which it is being put.
--Journal of American History
The book is a powerful indictment of the IRB regime.
--Law and Politics Book Review
Thoroughly researched story of how IRBs came to be, how they came to adopt rules designed for medical, biological, and psychological researchers and then to apply them to the social sciences, how those rules became institutionalized, and how the rules protect universities rather than the people who serve as subjects and informants in social science research.
--Contemporary Sociology