Showing posts with label research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label research. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

New Cross-disciplinary Antiobiotic Resistance Research Centre at my University




Yesterday, I received the delightful news that a big bid, in which I am one of several co-applicants, to establish a centre for research, education, innovation and change in the area of antibiotic resistance research, CARe at my university has been awarded a more than €5 million base funding for the coming 6-7 years in an internal university competition called the UGot Challenges, that's been going on for about 2 years.

The lead applicants of CARe are Joakim Larsson, professor of environmental biomedicine, and Fredrik Carlsson, professor of environmental and behavioural economics, and the co-applicants involve many senior researchers from the medical field, industry and societal collaborators, and several social scientists and humanities scholars, in the latter case, also my departmental colleagues philosophy professor Bengt Brülde and theory of science senior professor Margareta Hallberg. The aim of the centre is thus outspokenly and strongly cross-disciplinary, involving 6 faculties, acknowledging the challenge of antibiotic resistance, like many other broad challenges such as climate change, to involve many crucial aspects beyond those covered by natural and medical science and technology development. The primary scientific and technological target of CARe will moreover be what is presently considered as the last straw and stage of antibiotics to fight multi-resistant bacteria, so-called carbapenems, the development and use of which, of course, imply a large number of complex ethical issues, e.g. with regard to the need for highly restricted prescription in order not to boost further the current destructive trend in resistance development among bacteria, or exceptional need for haste in introducing new substances in spite of knowledge gaps or uncertainties.

Here is the official announcement from the university:

UGOT Challenges information (English)

Stage 2 decision
The university Vice-Chancellor has made the decision on the outcome of UGOT Challenges Stage 21 based on external evaluation. All 12 groups that were invited to stage 2 submitted a proposal before the deadline. 6 of the proposals have been approved.

Approved proposals
Centre for Antibiotic Resistance Research at University of Gothenburg. Joakim Larsson and Fredrik Carlsson
Centre for Collective Action Research. Sverker C Jagers and Sam Dupont
The Swedish Mariculture Research Center at University of Gothenburg. Kristina Sundell
Centre for Ageing and Health – studies on capability in ageing – from genes to society. Ingmar Skoog
Center for Critical Heritage Studies. Kristian Kristiansen and Ola Wetterberg
Centre for Future Chemical Risk Assessment and Management Strategies at the University of Gothenburg. Thomas Backhaus and Jessica Coria

Documents supporting the decision are available at www.gu.se/ugotchallenges.
The host departments have been assigned to submit a formal application to establish the centres in early 2016. When funding has been granted for an existing centre the operational plan should be updated.

About UGOT Challenges
University of Gothenburg will invest 300 million SEK in research under the theme "global societal challenges" over the next years. The aim is that a number of new centres will be started from 2016.


Wednesday, 28 October 2015

How to Read News About Science and Research (Very Brief Abbreviated Checklist Edition)

Step 1
Does the headline or introduction contain any of the following expressions: "might", "should", "expected to", "suggest", "can", "hoped", "may" or some equivalent?

Step 2
Don't bother reading and enjoy yourself while waiting for when there is some actual evidence on anything.

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

New Substantial Entry on Precautionary Reasoning and the Precautionary Principle in (Global) Bioethics Online – and Open Access for a While


I'm happy and proud to announce that a brand new invited 10 page entry by myself in the Encyclopedia of Global Bioethics (edited by Henk ten Have and published by Springer) on the topic of "Precautionary Principle" is now online. Moreover, for some time ahead (though I don't know how long) the entry is so-called open access – that is, it can be freely read online and downloaded by anyone!

Of course, the entry builds on some of my previous work on the ethics of precaution and risk, not least my book The Price of Precaution and the Ethics of Risk and a more brief encyclopedia piece built on that from two years back, as well as my knowledge of a wide variety of fields and issues in bioethics. However, the new entry is much fuller than the previous one and is in many ways a seminal and much broader text: it is the first time that I (and, to my knowledge, anyone) puts these strands of inquiry together in a systematic analytic overview, and I add some fresh thinking on the global aspects of both these areas on top of that. It should therefore offer something of interest for both people interested in bioethics, medical ethics, health care ethics, ethics of the life sciences and research ethics and bordering fields, and those more interested in the general grounding of public policy with regard to technology, science, environment, risk, uncertainty and ignorance, as well as those particularly pondering the global aspects of both these areas; or global ethics or politics in general. This is the abstract:

Precautionary reasoning has deep historical and wide cross-cultural roots in the ethics of health, health care, and medical research. As in general ethics, however, this side of bioethical thinking has not been the subject of focused critical analysis until recently. The emergence of the precautionary principle (PP) in general environmental and technology policy debate has, after an initial period of confusion, resulted in a range of possible ideas about the value of precaution and what sacrifices it may be worth. This has indicated some need for developments in ethical as well as decision theory. In bioethical debates, this process has left only vague traces, however. Although many issues exist where precautionary reasoning has a place, this is either often left unnoticed or arguments developed suffer from elementary flaws. Environmental and general public health ethics, the ethics of evidence-based practice in research, as well as clinical decision-making, management of normative or factual uncertainty, and the nature of clinical ethical virtues are all areas where precautionary ideas seem to have a place. Such reasoning moreover has specific relevance for global approaches to bioethics and health policy issues in a number of ways.
Keywords
Clinical research, Decision-making, Decision theory, Emerging technology, Environmental health, Evidence, Ignorance, Risk assessment, Technology assessment, Uncertainty
 The entry can be accessed and read here, and downloaded here. take your chance quickly, as the free availability may end anytime.

Friday, 10 April 2015

This is Huge: Serious Research Misconduct in Almost 3/4 of FDA Inspected Clinical Trials – Hidden by Both Inspecting Agency and Researchers


First I had problems taking it in: Almost 75% of US clinical trials inspected over a period of 15 years by the Food and Drug Agency, responsible for upholding regulation in this area, display serious misconduct of various kinds. It can't be that bad, I asked myself; if it was, I would have heard something about it before – research ethics in medicine being one of my areas of expertise! Except that I wouldn't, since neither the FDA nor the researchers in question have reported these stunning findings to the outside world. That is, until Charles Seife, an MD but also a journalist, decided to have a look at FDA documents of some of the made inspections between 1998 and 2013. What he found is reported in a recent article in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, where out of originally 600 trials, 101 where identified where the FDA had found strong reason of issuing complaint, and among these:

Fifty-seven published clinical trials were identified for which an FDA inspection of a trial site had found significant evidence of 1 or more of the following problems: falsification or submission of false information, 22 trials (39%); problems with adverse events reporting, 14 trials (25%); protocol violations, 42 trials (74%); inadequate or inaccurate recordkeeping, 35 trials (61%); failure to protect the safety of patients and/or issues with oversight or informed consent, 30 trials (53%); and violations not otherwise categorized, 20 trials (35%). Only 3 of the 78 publications (4%) that resulted from trials in which the FDA found significant violations mentioned the objectionable conditions or practices found during the inspection. No corrections, retractions, expressions of concern, or other comments acknowledging the key issues identified by the inspection were subsequently published.
 Seife concludes:

The FDA has legal as well as ethical responsibilities regarding the scientific misconduct it finds during its inspections. When the agency withholds the identity of a clinical trial affected by scientific misconduct, it does so because it considers the identity to be confidential commercial information, which it feels bound to protect. However, failing to notify the medical or scientific communities about allegations of serious research misconduct in clinical trials is incompatible with the FDA’s mission to protect the public health /... /
To better serve the public health, the FDA should make unredacted information about its findings of research misconduct more readily available. The agency should make sure that any substantial evidence of misconduct is available to editors and readers of the scientific literature /.../
... most of the burden for ensuring the integrity of the research in the peer-reviewed literature falls to the authors of the articles submitted to peer-reviewed journals. Currently, there is no formal requirement for authors seeking to publish clinical trial data to disclose any adverse findings noted during FDA inspections. Journals should require that any such findings be disclosed.
The nail on the head if there ever was one, and Seife is backed by an editorial, signed by three strong voices from the Yale and UCSF medical schools. FDA is liable to serious criticism for not proactively informing the scientific and medical communities, as well as the general public, of these matters. Journals which not immediately effect the standard indicated by Seife would deserve equally serious criticism. But the worst of all is the fact that such journal policies would be needed in the first place. 

The by far heaviest burden of criticism befalls those researchers, many of which have not only committed scientific fraud and serious ethical breaches, but have all in addition consciously choosen to actively surpress highly relevant information about the quality of the studies they have conducted. Not only is this relevant for the publication screening at journals to safeguard the quality of scientific publications. It is even more relevant for the assessment of the results reported in publications for the purpose of, e.g., licencing or decisions on clinical use, or public funding. These researchers have sold their scientific credibility and honour to whatever bidder (in the vast majority of cases, one suspects the pharmaceutical company funding the study) have incited them to keep mum. People doing such things have no place in either the academic or the medical community.

Seife has a popular report of the significance of his study in Slate, here.

This is, as far as I can see, a major research ethics and regulatory scandal, and it might just be hiding an even larger one. For, given the frequency of serious misconduct now revealed, one may very well ask what would be found if FDA was to cast its inspection net wider and inspect even more trials. And what would be the outcome of similar procedures in, e.g., Europe or Asia?

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Come and Work with Us in Practical Philosophy in Gothenburg: Post Doc Positions Open!



Today was released the first in a series of calls for application over the next coming years for research positions in practical philosophy at the University of Gothenburg, attached to our strategic Moral Responsibility Research Initiative (MRRI). MRRI, which has a broad conception of what moral responsibility research may involve, recently secured an approximately € 8.8 Million grant from the Swedish Research Council, plus matching funds from the University's central purse, to recruit Professor Paul Russell from the University of British Columbia as part time visiting professor for the next 10 years, and to strengthen our already existing MRRI programme with a number of new PhD and Post Doc positions. In addition, our research fellow, Joakim Sandberg, has recently secured a generous so-called Wallenberg Academy Fellowship, for a research programme on the philosophical and ethical aspects of sustainable financial institutions, which will also include a number of hirings ahead. On top of that, we have a few other new projects that will need to hire as well, and our regular little faculty funded recruitment of PhD's.

But this time, then, it is the MRRI intiative that starts looking for new post doctoral fellows to add to our already quite dynamic practical philosophy team. The MRRI programme, to quote the call, ...

 ... conducts research on responsibility within action theory, metaethics, and applied ethics, including healthcare ethics, business ethics, and criminal responsibility.

/... /

The postdoctoral fellow will contribute to the research environment, especially with respect to foundational and analytic issues concerning moral responsibility and free will (broadly conceived). He or she will also be expected to contribute to and actively participate in MRRI's research seminar.

Apart from research, duties may include teaching, supervising graduate students, course design, and other teaching-related activities; such supplementary duties will not exceed 20% of the position?s responsibilities.

The holder of the position is expected to carry out the vast majority of her/his research in Gothenburg and to regularly and consistently participate in the research group's various activities and programs (workshops, seminars, conferences, etc.).
 The entire call is here, where you can also find relevant contact details and all information on suitable background, criteria for assessment and how to apply. So, why not take a stab at joining myself, Paul, Joakim, Gunnar Björnsson (who coordinates MRRI), Daniela Cutas, Bengt Brülde, Susanna Radovic of the partnering Centre for Ethics Law and Mental Health, and a number of already present PhD's and Post Docs!

Sunday, 23 November 2014

Three Tales On Research Citation, Funding and Freedom


It is an ever growing development in the world of academic research, that researchers are being measured by various criteria of performance output. Two of these are citation – how much fellow researchers refer to your work, how much you have - as the saying goes - "academic impact", and ability to attract external funding. A third, that's been coming strong recently is the "societal relevance", which has prompted governments and purpose specific public as well as private financial backers of research to allocate money more and more within restricted programmatic schemes aimed to support research in (allegedly) pragmatically important areas. There is a lot of discussion of these developments among academics, and in the arts and humanities there is often a complaint that the systems installed are rigged at the outset to strongly bias in favour of biomedical and technological science, to some extent a bit of selected natural science. However, I'm not going to go down that route here. Neither will I question to what extent any of these parameters are indicators of research quality, mostly because I don't believe there is any such thing as a ready-made clear concept of research quality to use for such an assessment. My rather profane view is that different parties may be interested in backing, having or doing research for a number of very variable reasons, and any assessment of the outcome would be best assessed in light of whatever such reason is thought to motivate the endeavour.

Instead, I would like to tell three brief tales from my own research career, complicating things for anyone who think that the three parameters mentioned have some sort of joint relevance for how to assess research. This is not to say that there aren't other parameters one might want to use or that these three are "quality indicators", then, just that I will concentrate on these three, currently in strong vogue. My point with the tales is to show how easily scoring on the three parameters may come apart. More specifically, I will use them to illustrate how citation may come apart from both external funding, and dependence on directive research funding schemes.

Tale 1: The Ethics of Gene Technology and Sports
This is a field that I was more or less lured into by my friends and colleagues at the time, Torbjörn Tännsjö and Claudio Tamburrini. Claudio was pursuing an interest in the ethics and philosophy of sports, in particular the ethics of doping regulation, and him and Torbjörn has secured a book contract with Taylor & Francis to produce an edited collection on that topic, underscoring the impact on elite sports of technological development. I, at the time, had just started my tenure as senior lecturer in practical philosophy at the University of Gothenburg, had no research funding to speak about and was busy as hell with teaching many new courses, as well as working on various research proposals to secure some funding. Then Torbjörn and Claudio asks me if I want to contribute a chapter on the possible application of gene technology for enhancing sports performance, using the background of my former research on biomedical applications of gene technology undertaken in my post doctoral work. Hungry for merits as I was, and also a bit intrigued by the topic,  I accepted, and then spent quite a bit of my private time researching and writing up the piece the following months – I had no special funding of any sort, and the little faculty funding within my appointment for research was already more than fully claimed by other work. The book, Values in Sport: Elitism, Nationalism, Gender Equality and the Scientific Manufacture of Winners came out in 2000, and can be downloaded in its entirety for free from this source, including my contribution: "Selected champions: making winners in the age of genetic technology"

http://books.google.se/books?id=pZl5AgAAQBAJ&lpg=PA30&ots=_MjkUuZtv_&dq=values%20in%20sport%20t%C3%A4nnsj%C3%B6&hl=sv&pg=PA18#v=onepage&q=values%20in%20sport%20t%C3%A4nnsj%C3%B6&f=false

Pretty quickly, my chapter attracted attention among other scholars in philosophy, ethics and sports studies, I was invited to conferences and workshops, and a few years later I was again invited to contribute to a follow up volume edited by the same people, eventually published in 2005, and available for free download from here, and featuring my chapter "Ethical aspects of controlling genetic doping":


 
Once again, I wrote this chapter without any purpose specific funding, although by this time, I had secured a few projects on partly related areas and also been allocated a slightly better slice of faculty funding. However, writing this contribution was a direct result of the former chapter and would have been impossible to undertake withoput the existence of that former investment of work.

Later, both chapters have been reprinted in state-of-the-art edited collection volumes for use in academic teaching, here and here, and the first one is now my second most cited piece of writing ever, using the Google Scholar Citation tool, having collected 44 citations so far, and continuing to cited up during this year. The follow up chapter is not as well cited, being less radical in its main thesis, but also that one continues to attract interest.

Tale 2: The Morality of Scientific Openness
This story takes us even further back in time, to the period of my post doc days, which I spent in the now defunct Centre for Research Ethics, at the time run by the Royal Society of Arts and Science in Gothenburg, funded by a research project on the ethics of prenatal and other genetic reproductive testing. During that time I and the year following receiving my PhD, I had been sketching a text book on the ethics of technology that eventually never saw the light of day. One chapter in that book had been planned to be about the ethics of openness, secrecy and sharing as well as withholding information in science and research. I happened to mention this to the director of the CRE and my senior colleague in the project, Stellan Welin, who asked me if I had thought about this as a possible venture for a more advanced text, mentioning the angle of patent regulation and a context of scientific history I had been unaware of. Excited, I made some preliminary probing and, based on that, we submitted an abstract to the Congress of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, which was accepted and eventually presented in the Florence edition of this major event in the philosophy of science in 1995. Having received encouraging response there, back home we decided to draft an article, at the same time discovering the rather new journal Science and Engineering Ethics, which seemed perfect for the piece we planned. Thus submitting there, the resulting article "The Morality of Scientific Openness" (free online postprint), was published the following year in the second volume of this journal.

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2FBF02583928


This entire work was the result of spontaneous impulse, lust and the time used for it was not funded in any way, especially not by any purpose specific allocation of money, besides a little bit of extra support from the Wennergren Foundation to cover some of the expenses to attend the CLMPS congress. Less sensationalist and more dryly scholarly in its tone, the piece hasn't rocketed to the top as the first chapter of the previous tale, but it is among my better cited works, and also this one continues to attract interest all through up during this year.

Tale 3: The Philosophy of (Free) Improvisation
This story takes us even further back, to time of my PhD candidate days. having always had a side-life as an improvising musician, I was asked by my two good friends in that area of activity, Mats Gustafsson and Raymond Strid, to assist in the production of a special section on free improvised music of the Swedish periodical of contemporary (non-popular) music, Nutida Musik, among other things an essay of what is special about free improvisation. Doing this in parallel to finalising my doctoral thesis on the morality of abortion, in turn undertaken within a weak funding scheme, I used whatever sources I could find at the time, and wrote what turned out to be a seminal academic analytic piece on the concept of free improvisation, called (in Swedish), "Vad är fri improvisation?", published in 1992. A few years later, I was asked by Peter Stubley, who was then setting up the web resource "European Free Improvisation pages", whom I had some contact with through an emailing list for free improvisers in the 1990's, asked me if I could translate this text to English. I did so, and Peter published it on the EFI site, where it remains accessible for free. Another stretch of time later, this text was translated into Polish, and published in the Glissando magazine in 2005. All of this work was done completely outside any of the funding available to me during this time. As this work was from my standpoint not in any way central to my academic endeavours, but rather a spin-off of my musical interests, I paid scant attention to what then happened.

But, in fact, if the Swedish, English and Polish versions of this short essay are combined (1, 2, 3), it is in fact one of my decently cited works (total of 15 citations), having attracted scholarly attention from philosophy, and the general studies of music and arts, up to and including 2012, so far.

*

So, to round off, all of these three tales document how (relatively) well-cited (in my world) works of research appears without any sort of significant connection to pre-existing funding, even less funding for the specific purpose of the work in question. Rather, the three examples illustrate how cited research may appear despite the lack of funding, as well as despite of the presence of funding claiming a research time for more purpose specific undertakings. As I recall, the same pattern holds (without any claim to comparability in other respects) also to the story told by James Watson in The Double Helix about how the discovery of the DNA molecule came about.




Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Threats, Libel, Calls for FDA & Government Action – and a Petition to the Governor: Research Ethics Morass at the University of Minnesota Psychiatry Continues

The sad and disgraceful story about the appalling unwillingness of the University of Minnesota to in any way investigate closer what several pieces of evidence suggest may very well be a major research ethics scandal in its psychiatry department continues. The scandal involves drug trials connected to several major Pharma companies, such as Astra-Zeneca, but for once it is not them who appear to be doing the bad deed – it is the university itself.

Former reports on this by myself are here, and here. The reporting of University of Minnesota bioethicist Carl Elliott is assembled here – an overview of the basic background story about apparently mishandled psychiatric drug trials linked to at least one death by suicide is here. In the Scientific American, blogger and clinical trial specialist Dr. Judy Stone is also reporting and commenting on the case, here.

So, what's new?

Well, first of all, not only does the University of Minnesota clearly bend its own rules inside out to avoid what would otherwise be the obvious line of action: investigate, clarify and report with full disclosure and transparency. It has, it now appears, sunk so low as to use its own General Counsel – one Mark Rotenberg, who just happens to be identical to the lawyer who has been attempting to whitewash this story and motivate the avoidance of investigations – to in so many words try to threat Elliott with possibly disciplinary actions for pressing on for an inquiry. Yes, that's right, a university threatens one of its academic employees – a bioethics professor at that – for simply insisting on that the truth be sought out and revealed. In short: for doing his job well.

In fact, not only that – the University of Minnesota President, Eric Kaler has chosen this well-timed moment to hint that research ethics regulation at the University, not least with regard to academia-industry collaboration in psychiatry may be "excessively burdensome" and expressing a "low tolerance of risk" and that "we’re afraid a misdeed of two decades ago will reappear again" – the latter obviously referring to past very serious misconduct cases (described in the post linked to above) in, where do you think? – yes indeed, the department of psychiatry. Nice.

Second, the University has finally tried to respond to the claim of Elliott that several patient consent and other forms seem to exist in duplicate but not differing – for instance, not all are signed! – versions, apparently originating from different times. This is covered in Elliott's former postings linked to above, as well as Dr. Stone's astute analysis in the Scientific American. The formerly mentioned General Counsel, Mark Rotenberg, responds on behalf of the university in an article in the Star Tribune to this is, again in so many words: Hey, you probably faked those yourself – or the families of the victims did!! That is, he doesn't mention any particular party and uses the word "authenticity", but in context the content is clear. Being a European, even though I am a Scandinavian and thus possibly with some kinship to the mysterious Minnesota ways of academia, I may be misinformed of some legal peculiarities: but isn't it at least a little bit legally troublesome to accuse other people of illegal actions (forgery of official legal documentation is a criminal act in Minnesota and the USA, isn't it?) without any shred of evidence?

Elliott's own response is the obvious and only sensible one (besides suing the guy for libel, that is): if you say so, help me to find out! Substantiate your claim! Open the files! Disclose the evidence! That is, run the investigation that should have been run ages ago, but that you and those you serve have denied and forestalled!

Third, Elliott has now officially written to both the Office of Civil Rights of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and to the Office of Compliance of the FDA to call for investigations of related parts of this troubling story. The letters you can see and download below.

 


And Elliott is not the only one acting. A close friend and the mother of Dan Markingson, the young man whose death by suicide is clearly linked to one of the deeply suspicious psychiatry research trials involved in this potential scandal, is petitioning the Minnesota Governor to investigate the University of Minnesota for its refusal to act and investigate. You can read the statement and, if you want to, sign it yourself here.

There will be more, I'm sure......







Sunday, 5 February 2012

How to Avoid Shaming Yourself and Your Field in the Academic Online Open Access Publishing Jungle

This is a post that follows up on two former ones (here and here) about how the new possibilities for easily setting up online open access academic journals create not only exciting opportunities for publishing and spreading important research results, but also a murky layer of sub-standard and outright scam operations. This has become an important issue for two reasons: First, these operations threatens the hole credibility of academic research, not least by providing incompetent, second-rate wannabe academics, or people who want to use the academic insignia as a cloak, e.g., for political opinion work, with a surface impression of respectability. This, in turn, connects to the next point, that for most people – also experienced academics – it is very difficult to keep track of and identify these operations – witnessed, for instance, by the fact that a fair share of them agree to be on bogus editorial boards for journals that do not even have an operationally responsible managing editor. This second problem becomes particularly acute, however, for young, aspiring academics and researchers, who try to navigate their early careers in an environment where the pressure to be published in peer-reviewed, international (= English language) journals is ever growing, and where most national funding bodies now demand publications coming out of projects they fund to be open access.

So, this post is meant as a help primarily for this latter group, but also for supervisors who are asked questions about this by students, PhD candidates, post docs and so on, but may not have been as busy keeping themselves up to date on this matter as they nowadays need to be. I'll do two things here, mainly. First, I'll list a few indicators, each of which providing sufficient reason to avoid an online open access journal at all cost, or at least be very, very wary of publishing there or lending it your services in other ways. In effect, several of these apply also to opportunities for being awarded a position on an editorial board, perform peer review work, and so on. Second, I'll cross-post some things from other blogs and provide some useful links that I was made aware of thanks to the response on my last post on this matter from bioethics prof. colleague Leigh Turner on Twitter.

1. Indicators for avoiding an online open access publishing opportunity
  •  The journal has no ISSN number.
  • You receive a generic email asking you to submit an article to the journal (Note: editors working on special issues may sometimes solicit submissions, but in those cases the emails are personal).
  • Colleagues you trust receive said sort of emails
  • The journal has no information about indexing on its website
  • The journal lists Google Scholar as one of the indexes that track it (Google scholar is a useful tool for analysing online impact and availability in a wide sense, but it is not an academic quality indicator for journals – Google Scholar lists just about anything academic-ish to be found online)
  • The journal is not indexed by either any of the discipline-specific indexes you know of (such as "Philosopher's Index" in my case), or by general quality indexes, such as the Web of Knowledge citation indexes (ISI, SSCI, AHCI). Note that a very new journal may not yet be indexed, but still be OK, check the other points for assessment in that case!
  • The journal displays statements or signs giving an impression that it is "considered for", "tracked for" or "unofficially" tracked by some index of the type mentioned above.
  • The journal has no actual person as acting or managing editor, or editor-in-chief.
  • The journal promises very fast (1-4 days) peer review and publication process
  • None or very few people on the editorial board are people known to you as respected people in your branch of specialisation and don't appear to be obviously worthy of such respect after an internet search of their publication record
  • You may also perform searches to check how articles published in the journal are being cited outside of this journal and this and other similar publishers. The less external citation, the less credibility.
2. List of Online  Open Access Publishers to Avoid, plus some further facts
So, Leigh sent me a link to this rather amusing post describing how far it may go with the sort of operations we are talking about here: editorial board members on these journals may not even be real people! Perhaps we shouldn't be too surprised, then, that journals such as these have no problem accepting and publishing bogus computer generated gibberish papers (as long as the OA fee is paid) – eventually leading to the resignation of the editor! (thanks Leigh, again!) And here's a blog post on two online open access publishers notorious for spamming. But the pure gold that Leigh sent me was this list, originally posted at the Metadata Blog – here cross-posted in its entirety:

Beall's List of Predatory, Open-Access Publishers
by Jeffrey Beall
2012 Edition


Predatory, open-access publishers are those that unprofessionally exploit the author-pays model of open-access publishing (Gold OA) for their own profit. Typically, these publishers spam professional email lists, broadly soliciting article submissions for the clear purpose of gaining additional income. Operating essentially as vanity presses, these publishers typically have a low article acceptance threshold, with a false-front or non-existent peer review process. Unlike professional publishing operations, whether subscription-based or ethically-sound open access, these predatory publishers add little value to scholarship, pay little attention to digital preservation, and operate using fly-by-night, unsustainable business models.

An asterisk (*) indicates that the publisher is appearing on this list for the first time.

          This bogus, Nigeria-based publisher has been around for years, and continues to increase its journal fleet of over one hundred titles from all areas of study. Seeking legitimacy, it falsely associates itself with authentic organizations and conferences.

          One of several Faisalabad, Pakistan-based publishers (likely one outfit with several brands), this publisher claims to be headquartered in New York. Its tag line is "Converting research into knowledge," but it ought to say, "Converting research into cash" (for the publisher).

          This publisher, caught here in its formative stage, only has two titles. The main page invites proposals for new journal titles. Full of contradictions, this site is confusing. Its content appears to be open access, but it lists a subscription fee of $400 per year. On one of its editorial board pages it says, "Elite panel members have a decision weight equivalent of two referees," so if you know one of these elite members, you're in luck. 

          Another of the Faisalabad, Pakistan-based brands of open-access journals, this one ironically describes itself saying "Asian Network for Scientific Information is a leading scientific publisher and pinior [sic] in electronic publication in Asia." I think they mean "pioneer." This typo is but one example of the errors and unprofessionalism this publisher presents to the world with each page view.

          Among the first, large-scale gold OA publishers, Bentham Open continues to expand its fleet of journals, now numbering over 230. Bentham essentially operates as a scholarly vanity press.

          A new publisher with a ridiculous name, this operation is known to list scholars on its journals' editorial boards without their knowledge or permission.

          Although this publisher purports to be headquartered in Libertyville, Illinois, United States, it actually appears to operate out of China. The home page shows a view of the Libertyville Industrial Park, the supposed home of the operation, as if to prove it operates in the U.S.

          This New Zealand-based medical publisher boasts high-quality appearing journals and articles, yet it demands a very high author fee for publishing articles. Its fleet of journals is large, bringing into question how it can properly fulfill its promise to quickly deliver an acceptance decision on submitted articles.

          Late to the party, this publisher currently has nine titles, but I fully expect it to expand its fleet. The site says that all of its journals will publish their inaugural issues in July, 2011, but as of this writing (late November, 2011) all remain devoid of content. 
  
          This publisher purports to be headquartered in the U.K. with offices in North America and Singapore, but it really is a storefront type operation based out of Faisalabad, Pakistan.

          This bogus publisher of 12 journal titles says it's headquartered in Irvine, California. Its fleet of journal titles all begin with "Journal of Advanced Research in ..." The domain name registration does show an Irvine address, but at an apartment. Only a few of the titles have any content, but to view what little content there is, one must register with the site and agree to its terms and conditions, which I refused to do. Is a publication still considered open access when the hosting site requires registration? An organization that self-identifies as an institute when it is really just a money-making scheme is fraudulent.

          The subject of much recent debate, this Croatia-based publisher looks and acts like an innovative, scholarly publisher. However, looking under the clever disguise reveals only a sophisticated vanity press, an enterprise where anybody can, for a price, get their work published in a journal or as a monograph.

          I only recently was alerted to this open-access publisher. Its fleet has 82 journal titles, including -- perhaps appropriately -- the "International Journal of Nuts and Related Sciences." Based apparently in Dubai, the "instructions for authors" page warns, "After Acceptance authors have to pay the processing handling charges," but the charges aren't listed.  More information may be available from an unnamed editor at idosi_editor@yahoo.com.

          Another Nigeria-based operation, this publisher is notable (in a negative way) for its interesting journal issue covers (most are created from pirated photographs), and for the Gmail addresses its employees all use. The absurd banner on its main page shows a picture of part of a duckling swimming in a lake.

          If you love advertising, you'll love this site, for its main purpose is to make money from click-through ads. A one-man operation based out of Texas, its journal titles all begin with the phrase, "The Internet Journal of ..." It claims to be the largest independent, online medical publisher, but that claim conveniently ignores article quality, which is quite low.

Knowledgia Scientific (formerly Knowledgia Review)
          Another Pakistan-based publisher (with some possible ties to Malaysia), this firm has around a dozen titles, but some have very little content. Also, some of its journals lack editors and list only a few people on their editorial boards. Currently, this publisher's website claims the firm is waiving all author fees, but I remain suspicious. Are there hidden charges? The lack of content, skipped volume numbers, and the waiving of author fees are indicators of a publisher that is failing.

          The tag line under the name on this publisher's page is "Freedom to research." It might better say "Freedom to be ripped off." Based in New Zealand, this medical and scientific publisher boasts about the number of page views and downloads the articles in its eighty journals have had. Its author fees are high.

          Another Pakistan-based outfit, this one makes its 34 journals open access but also offers print subscriptions, if you desire to pay for them. A slick operation with an online manuscript submission system, this publisher has been successful at attracting submissions. It's "contact us" page only yields a form, and no contact or geographical information is given. Always be wary of open-access publishers that give less than full contact information, including location, telephone numbers, email addresses, etc. At the same time, be aware that many publishers misrepresent their true business locations.

          This publisher's name plays off the terms "genomics" and "proteomics." It hosts about 200 journal titles, many lacking any articles. As a side business, the publisher also organizes and hosts conferences. The contact page lists offices in the United States, Australia, and India. Its pages have Facebook "LIKE" buttons and its home page falsely claims an association with EBSCO Publishing and with other publishers and organizations.          

          This new publisher of five journals purports to be from "P.O. Box 3423, CT, 06460, United States of America" and cleverly uses the Greek letter β (beta) to indicate the English letter b in its title. A check of the domain name registration does indicate a Milford, Connecticut address. Still, the unidiomatic use of English throughout the site points to a non-U.S. operation: "Call for the papers," "Instructions for the authors," etc. Many of the papers deal with Nigeria, so it's likely this publisher is yet another Nigeria scam.  

          This publisher has a fleet of 28 journals, and most of their titles begin with the phrase, "American Journal of ..." Its "contact us" page is merely a web form, and no contact or geographical information is given. The journal titles lead one to believe the publisher is North America-based, but it could be from almost anywhere, and in fact is likely not from North America.

This publisher's fleet of 18 journals all try to show legitimacy by having titles that begin with "American" or "British" or "International." Any journal that begins with these terms must be respected, right? The "contact us" page is chiefly a web form, but the site does list three offices, one in the U.K., one in the U.S., and one in India. The site uses the "pool reviewers" method of peer review. Although the journals do have nominal editorial boards, there is really just one big editorial board for all the publisher's journals and reviewers are supposedly selected from that big list to review each submission. Looking at individual articles, I notice that the period between submission and acceptance is generally two weeks, an indication of bogus or nonexistent peer review.
         
          This Saint Cloud, Minnesota-based publisher is essentially a one-man operation that employs many non-standard publishing practices. For example, the entire site has an ISSN number, and the large editorial boards are organized not by journal but by broad discipline. Also, individual journals lack editors in chief. It was reported earlier this year that the entire operation is up for sale.

          This publisher, like the Institute of Advanced Scientific Research, claims to be based in Irvine, California (it lists a PO box number and an email address, but no telephone number). It has over one hundred journal titles, most having started publication in 2009, and has managed to attract numerous article submissions. This high number may be because of the publisher's relatively low author fees: $300 for the first ten pages, and $50 for each additional page, a policy that also encourages shorter papers. The journals each list large editorial boards, with members from all over the world, especially China. Indeed, the pricelist (for those desiring hardcopies of the journals), lists the prices in both U.S. and Chinese currency. This publisher also publishes books and conference proceedings. I found its servers to suffer from a slow response time.



Recommendation: Do not do business with the above publishers, including submitting article manuscripts, serving on editorial boards, buying advertising, etc. There are numerous traditional, legitimate journals that will publish your quality work for free, including many legitimate, open-access publishers.

If you are involved in any form of scholarly evaluation such as, hiring, tenure / promotion review, or grant funding, be skeptical of articles published by any of these publishers listed above. Reading a list of publications or a vita, it is very difficult to distinguish legitimate journals from the illegitimate ones. One of the tricks the sham publishers use is to assign authentic-sounding and appearing titles to their journals. The presence of these bogus publishers has changed the task of scholarly evaluation, which now needs a keener eye to discern articles published in fraudulent journals.


Watchlist: We do not consider the following publishers to be predatory, open-access publishers, but they may show some characteristics of them, and we are closely monitoring them.


          Based in Cairo, Egypt, this publisher is now on its own after its collaboration with the publisher Sage ended in 2011. This publisher has way too many journals than can be properly handled by one publisher, I think, yet supporters like ITHAKA boast that the prevailing low wages in Egypt, as well as the country's large college-educated, underemployed workforce, allow the company to hire sufficient staff to get the job done. Still, this publisher continues to release new fleet startups of journals, each group having titles with phrases in common: Advances in ... (31 titles) and Case Reports in ... (32 titles). It appears that Hindawi wants to strategically dominate the open-access market by having the largest open-access journal portfolio.

          This publisher was on the main list last year. It is the publisher for many well-respected Indian professional societies and is disseminating abundant, high-quality research. However, its business model is vague and unproven: it provides free HTML versions of articles but charges for the PDF version. Also, it needs to improve its web presence. Many of its journal websites referred to the publisher as a publisher of "Sports, technology, and medicine" (STM) journals, instead of "Science, technology, and medicine," the correct term.

          This Italian publisher has some of the qualities of a legitimate publisher and some of a predatory one. It has about fifty journal titles, some with intriguing names like Wine Studies and Antiqua. On the other hand, visitors to the publisher's website will encounter sloppy housekeeping in the form of dead links, and a prominent link to PayPal on every journal's home page, supposedly for the author fees but giving the publisher's real motive away. The publisher claims its content is "indexed" in SherpaRomeo, but that isn't an indexing service. PAGEPress needs to clean up its act.

          Based in Poland (with a contact address in London, U.K.), this publisher claims to be the second-largest open-access publisher in the world, with over 200 open-access journals in its fleet. Versita Open publishes some of its titles on behalf of learned societies in Central and Western Europe. The frightening thing about an operation this large is the amount of time and resources it takes to edit a single peer-reviewed journal is multiplied in this case by 200. Versita also has for-profit publishing operations, but it appears to be slowly flipping its model to gold open-access for journals. Moreover, Versita Open also sells its open-access titles in print form, by paid subscription. Versita Open claims that there are no author fees for most of its open-access journals, so its business model is unclear. Are its for-profit titles subsidizing its open-access ones? Do the societies pay all the cost of publishing the society journals on the Versita Open platform? We think few in the U.S. have even heard of this firm, so it will be interesting to see how it progresses, and we hope it evolves into a respected open-access publisher.

Sunday, 15 January 2012

Bids, not Blogs – nor Research or Articles

Thought I'd just post a brief thing to explain why there has been no new post in a while. The explanation is familiar to all who have come into closer contact with the world of academic research: I'm at the moment heavily engaged in what is nowadays by universities and governments considered to be the most precious of research tasks – namely the authouring and submission of applications for monetary funding to do research. That's right, the government research budget is used for paying me a salary so that I can apply for money to actually do that which motivates the research budget in the first place. This idea is expressed, e.g., by performance indicators governing how much government funds will be allocated to my university, faculty and department next year – where the attraction of external funding is by far the most important one (since it weighs the most by far in terms of money next year). So, in effect, besides teaching two minor courses and perhaps being able to submit one of the several papers I have been unable to finish due to this allocation of tasks by my employer, this is what my working spring will be about: being paid money for maybe (or, since the competition is deadly, rather unlikely) getting some money to do the very thing I would have been doing with my working time had I not been tasked primarily to write applications.

I'm not the only one sensing irrationality and counterproductivity in this way of the world, as you can see.

Saturday, 19 November 2011

On the Very Idea of Security and Terrorism Research

A little while ago I posted about a debate in my country with regard to research on and press reports about alleged former Swedish agents of STASI – the security agency of the former German Democratic Republic (GDR). The debate continues, so far with rather indeterminate results, but the issues raised by Birgitta Almgren's book (see the former post) got me thinking about issues in other areas that connect to a wider set of questions with regard to the very idea of conducting proper research about secret or security related activities, people and organisations. I touched on this issue in my former post when pointing out that, from the point of view of the well-tempered scientist, empirical research where data is not readily available for independent inspection by others is a rather odd – if not self-defeating – concept. So, in effect, can there really be such a thing as "security research" and "security experts"?

This question is interesting not only from an academic point of view, but just as much – if not more – from a general societal one. Nowadays, whenever there is some significant turmoil or development in international politics, such as riots, concentrated propaganda or violent attacks seemingly targeting a well-defined group, semi-military strikes of the form that we often like to call terrorism, and so on, you can bet a few months salary on there being a stampede of people in the media labelled "security researcher", "security expert" or something of the kind. Sometimes the word "security" is exchanged for "military", terrorism" or "intelligence", but that makes no difference. Sometimes, the members of the herd are attached to public research institutions, sometimes to governments, sometimes to what has become known as "think tanks" (i.e. interest organisations posing as public research institutions). But that doesn't matter either – in the present context at least. What does matter, though, is that they all are being held out – and normally hold out themselves – to possess special insight, advanced knowledge or expertise worthy of special trust. It is because of this that these people get to shape our perceptions and views of world and domestic events through the media. It is because of this that they are employed by government agencies or called in to brief policy makers when the need arises. So, effectively, the question I will be asking is not only about to what extent, and on what conditions, proper security research can be done, but also to what extent the credibility apparently enjoyed by the sort of people just described can have any substance. Again, the basis for my doubts is the very nature of the object of the alleged research, insight or expertise – that fact that when the factual basis of the alleged research is secret, covert or otherwise inaccessible for others, the very idea of proper research is undermined in a fundamental way.

Why is this particular feature of research – open access to data, research protocols, and so on – so important? Well, one of the things that is usually held out by philosophers and theorists of science is that science and research are essentially a collective enterprises. While in the eyes of the public and mass media, a research result is delivered when an article, report or book is published, from the point of view of the research community in the field in question, this is merely the first step towards a result. The result is eventually produced through a complex interaction of checking for mistakes and misreadings at different levels, offering alternative interpretations or explanations, questioning the validity of arguments, and so on. This goes on in all areas of research, regardless of whether it is qualitative or quantitative or both, whether its main questions are truth oriented or exploratory interpretative or both, and so on.

A nice example from the biomedical and natural sciences regards the breakthrough of the first reproductive cloning of a larger animal. The cloning of the sheep Dolly was first reported in a letter to Nature in february, 1997. Many believe that this is the time when the possibility of this sort of cloning was discovered. However, in the scientific world this was very far from the truth. Although Ian Wilmut and his team have been retrospectively credited for delivering the first report of the first successful attempt, the discovery that this was in fact the case was made almost one and a half years later, after a meticulous checking and re-checking of data, possible mistakes and alternative explanatory hypotheses undertaken and eventually evaluated by many people outside of Wilmut's group reviewing the data and trying the methods on other animals (some sources of the reports of this work are here, here and here). That is when a research result – rather than a report and a conjecture – came into being and the producer of this result was the collective of all of the people involved throughout the process. A more recent example of a similar thing can be seen in the example of the surprising report from physicists at CERN that they have measured particle speeds higher than that of light. In the very same report it is said "independent measurements are needed before the effect can either be refuted or firmly established". In other words, this is a report and a conjecture, whether or not it is a result, time and a probably very heavy load of work of many other people besides the CERN team will tell.

Now, this was natural science and it may be believed that things are different in at least some disciplines in the humanities or social sciences. This, however, would be a misconception. Indeed, the humanities and social sciences to some extent deal with very different research questions than the natural sciences and, for sure, their methods are to a large extent rather different. Indeed, some areas of the humanities (such as certain areas of  literature) do not even make inquiries where evaluations in terms of true/false are very relevant (although this should not be overstated, since also in these areas claims are being made and defended – e.g. about an interpretation of a poem being possible, interesting or innovative). But none of these special features takes away the fact that also in these field, the achievement of research results is essentially a collective matter. Just as in the natural or biomedical sciences, when articles and books make conjectures and report work done in the humanities and social sciences, this is just the first step towards a result that also in these fields in the end emanates out of the combined efforts of many. And, in the humanities in particular, this is normally evident regarding the work leading up to publication – a simple proof being the extensive acknowledgement sections normally attached as a preamble to publications in this field.

Now, to have such a collective process of criticism and improvement, access to data, details about method, sources and so on is, of course, of vital importance. If that cannot be had, the process cannot develop according to the standards of research and, consequently, nothing deserving the label of research has occurred and, even more so, no research results will ever come out, regardless of how much the investigator in question applies methods, tools and theories commonly used in research.

So, what about security research, then? Well, it is obvious that some research with regard to secret political or military operations is indeed possible. This regards mostly historical research looking at events from a rather long time ago, where archives have been opened and seals of secrecy lifted. But even then there may be severe limitations, e.g. due to incompleteness of the archives (sometimes due to deliberate cleansing) or inaccessibility of what spies call "humint", that is informants who personally experienced or otherwise possess credible knowledge about what documents and records describe. Moreover, when the research regards what is effectively spy activity, to have a lot of humint from different angles is essential – and this for the very same reason why humint is essential in spying and intelligence work: Whatever there is on paper (or harddrives) may in this area of reality be interpreted in very many and mutually exclusive ways.

Say, for instance, that you find genuine documents from an intelligence agency of a country, A, listing someone from another country, B, as an agent or a friendly source. Call this person Max. Does this mean that there are good reason to believe that Max indeed was spying for A? Not necessarily, the documents may be assessment reports reflecting mere perceptions of an officer in the intelligence services of A – perceptions that may have been dismissed. But suppose that we find more documents pointing in the same direction. Not only Max's name on a list, but also summaries of reports allegedly supplied by Max, assessment by independent officers and the receivers of the intelligence allegedly coming from Max, details of operational procedures to be applied with regard to Max, and so on. Isn't this quite strong proof that Max was spying for A? Not at all, and this is clearly seen when we ponder the obvious fact that, for an intelligence organisation, there are many reason for storing documents in its archives besides keeping track of actual events. The most obvious reason would be to authenticate what in old KGB terminology was called maskirovka, that is, operations aiming to deceive rather than collect knowledge. There are many well-known military examples of this, but in peace-time, spreading disinformation is mostly about either influencing political development in a country or having one's counterpart in another country set off on a false trail. This may, for instance, be about discrediting a person assessed to be a valuable asset for the other country. So, the intelligence or security service of A may have viewed Max as such a person with regard to B and thus developed plans to undermine his career. Under the prudent and quite realistic assumption that B would have sources within the intelligence and security community of A, such a plan cannot be put into operation without the discrediting information about Max being possible to authenticate through the presence of actual documentation describing Max's treason against B in the archives of the relevant organisations of A. Another possibility is that A wants to be able to point the finger at Max in order to deflect suspicion from another, real, spy or friendly asset in B. And so on. In a well-run organisation practicing maskirovka, many such false trails would be present in its archives, several of which devised for various eventualities, neither of which may ever be actualised.

It is difficult not to come off as a conspiracy theory nutter when describing possibilities like these. However, if you propose to be doing research, say, on the operations of security and intelligence involving A and B, such possibilities cannot be overlooked. After all, research is supposed to be something more advanced than just common sense thinking, the knowledge produced by it is supposed to be especially credible and far-reaching. So, minimally, then, it would be necessary to check what the presence of the documents pointing the finger at Max is due to according to some people involved. One of these would, of course, be Max, colleagues of Max, friends and family of Max. Others would be relevant officers of the organisation of A alleged in the documents to be running Max as an agent, as well as their counterintelligence and intelligence counterparts in B. And so on.Yet another thing to check is if there are sources of information (people or documents) that have not yet been checked and that might cast light on the matter. In addition, for each of these possible sources, assessment has to be made with regard to credibility and their possible reasons for distorting the truth or the possibility that they in turn have been deceived. And so on and so forth. The trouble, of course, is that none of this can usually be accomplished. Either because the people have vanished or died or don't want to talk, or because relevant documentation is withheld, lost or destroyed. Or, which is very common in the case of the so-called terrorist experts, sources are kept a secret – leaving it a very open question whether or not there are any sources in the first place.

Take the case if the recent research into STASI operations in Sweden. This research is based on a fragment of documentation held by the Swedish security service. In addition, Almgren consulted the STASI archives in Germany and interviewed a few people there. However, as she recently pointed out, there are many more documents believed to be held by the CIA, for whatever reasons that CIA see fit. Also, we can be certain that the German security service has gone through what there is and made its selection. Moreover, the documents there are are those left behind by officers of STASI in the first place – the base of archival evidence in this matter thus having been originally shaped through choices made by those people, for whatever agenda that directed their actions at the time. On top of that, we have the far from improbable possibility of there being lots of documentation, the existence of which is withheld from the eye of researchers by any of these parties. In addition to this, Swedish law prohibits Almgren from making the identity of the people she describe known, or to approach them herself for interview purposes. Neither can any other researcher, by implication. In all, this makes a strong case for the claim that the prospect of having any research results in this area is close to nil. This is not changed by the fact that Almgren is an esteemed researcher or that she has done as well as she could, using the tools of the research trade available to her. In the end, the outcome will never be more than an (admittedly unusually advanced) piece of journalism. My own personal opinion is that she should therefore not have published the book, since under present circumstances it is just as likely to distort the truth as making it clear, while at the same time causing human suffering. Instead, she should have done from the beginning what she is doing now: calling for  changes of the circumstances so that real research becomes possible.

Now, in the case of Almgren, at least there is an honest researcher doing her best under the circumstances and disclosing what she can disclose (although, perhaps, she shouldn't have). With the various security or terrorism experts appearing in the media as soon as there is a bombing, a shooting or any other sort of semi-military violent event or conflict the story is much, much worse.

First, many of these people are employed by actual players in the very games on which they are called to give expert input – intelligence or security services, foreign affairs ministries, the military, political party affiliated organisations, and so on. All of these have their own agendas in the matters on which the alleged experts are called in to testify. The worst case of all are the so-called think-tanks, where the actual agenda, funding sources and mission-setters are as a rule carefully hidden from the public behind a marshmallow-ish cloud of noncommittal declarations on a homepage. Now, had they actually been real researchers, this may not have been so serious, since anyone could then have checked what they are saying, their evidence, their sources, and so on. But, of course, this is as a rule impossible. These people at best come out as spin doctors or sensation journalists attempting to instigate a smear campaign – referring to one unidentified but allegedly credible and well-placed source after another. Most of the time, however, it's not even that – it's just them and their alleged expertise. Tragicomical enough, this claim to credibility is often backed up by citing the very thing that should make any person doubt what they have to say – their connection to any of the sort of organisations mentioned above.

Now, most of these self-professed experts are smart, at least in a street-level sort of way. If you listen carefully to what they have to say the next time they're on the news, or read those of their reports that it is possible for a citizen to access, there isn't an awful lot of specific, controllable information in there. Whenever a sentence seems to make a claim of a sort that would be possible to fault or confirm, you will find it surrounded by qualifications draining it of all substantial content. What is left is the emotional and evaluative tendency: certain parties or people are being associated with certain emotionally or evaluatively loaded words or phrases. Observe, for instance, how these people – without a hint of an argument – shape and protect a certain conception of what events can be called acts of terrorism. So my own answer to the riddle of why on earth they are being employed by anybody is quite simple: the salary is coming out of the propaganda budget.

But don't they ever utter a testable conjecture, these people. Indeed, on scattered occasions they do. Let me take a recent example from my own backyard. I trust that you are familiar with the bombings and heinous killings in Oslo, Norway, committed by the tall, blond right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik. When the news about the bombings broke, it was immediately commented on by my country's most notorious so-called security and terrorism experts, Magnus Ranstorp – in the very words on his homepage at the Swedish National Defence College, where he is employed:

Over the last 20 years Dr. Magnus Ranstorp has worked closely on terrorism and counterterrorism issues worldwide with a special focus on Islamist extremism
Ranstorp's initial message was that the Oslo and Utøya mayhem and tragedy was most probably an attack by Al-Quaeda (here, and here). This conjecture was based on no evidence whatsoever besides the credibility of Ranstorp's self-professed expertise. A few hours later, when it had been confirmed that the attacker was a tall, blond Norwegian national, Ranstorp once again sought publicity, now saying in Sweden's largest daily that this was "unprecedented" and quite beside the dominant trends (here), this in spite of the fact that nationalist, separatist and right-wing extremist (Breivik's motives seem to be a mix of these) motivated violence has been dominant during a rather long time in official European statistics – in particular if the UK is seen as a special case (see the latest report on European terrorism and trend from Europol). It may be added that Ranstorp is on record as viewing the Europol statistics, the closest we have to any sort of verifiable research data in this area, as being a political tool for deflecting what he is convinced (naturally for undisclosed reasons) is the largest and most important threat: islamist terror-groups. A few days on, when Breivik's motives and planning where starting to become known, Ranstorp raced to the fore once again, now conjecturing that even if Breivik was anti-Islam and anti-Islamism, he was at the root a product of Islamist terror (in Swedish media described by Ranstorp as a "hybrid", actually a little bit of an Islamist besides the anti-islamist motivation), since he had learned a lot of nouts and bolts about bombing and terror tactics from them (here, for once in English). I suppose that Ranstorp would be quite willing to generalise the principle thus applied, in consequence claiming Al-Quaeda terror to be partly Zionist (as practiced before the creation of the current state of Israel), this Zionist terror being partly Nazi, Nazi terror as practiced by the SA in the 1930's as partly Catholic (the pogroms during centuries), and so on and so forth. Wonderful to have a sharp mind at work in the service of mankind, isn't it? In addition, in all of these rants, Ranstorp is silently nudging the reader towards the notion that, in fact, Breivik is not even a terrorist, he's a nutter - apparently implying, in contradiction to what he says in general about right-wing terrorists (see links above),  that terrorists by definition have to be quite sane people. So much for the notion of researchers and experts on terror and security.

But behind this comedy, there are more serious issues to consider. Ranstorp is quite obviously a propaganda megaphone posing as a researcher. The only explanation for keeping him employed at the National Defence College appears to be the one offered above. His main agenda, apparently, is to preach the teaching that terror worthy of the attention of policy makers and security organisations is islamist terrorism. When facts don't suit Dr. Ranstorp, he declares them to lack credibility (they have to, don't they?!) or bends them in the dodger manner exemplified above. But Ranstorp is not alone. He has colleagues, who profess the same dogma in more clever ways, not sticking out their necks with propositions that are in fact open for straightforward scrutiny. Magnus Norell is my country's other notorious security and terror expert, employed at the Swedish Defence Research Agency. In the same context where Ranstorp declared that he didn't have to pay attention to the Europol statistics, Norell made the more cautious claim (quite consistent with named statistics) that the real problem is islamist ideological "radicalisation", which he claims "can lead to acts of terror" (here). No shit, Sherlock. But, of course, Norell's message isn't as trivial as that. The message is that we have reason to, at least tentatively, believe that there is a causal or explanatory link between embracing an ideology of the type that Norell refers to and participating in politically motivated and organised acts of violence targeting civilians. Norell, in contrast to Ranstorp, seems to be a reflecting person, so I suppose that he is aware of the sort of evidence that would be needed to support a conjecture like that. For instance, one would need to compare an abundance of currently non-existing statistics on the varying ideological leanings (or lack of such) of people and their actions at later times. This evidence is simply not at hand and will not be in the foreseeable future. Being charitable, I also assume that Norell is familiar with the problems of distinguishing socialisation and selection mechanisms in social science research. That is, even if there was to be a statistical correlation between belief in the ideology in question and later acts of terrorism, this can just as well be explained by the suggestion that people who are prone to commit such acts are also prone to embrace beliefs that justify them to do what they desire to do. The prospect of checking for that, I conjecture, is once again close to nil. And this, I suppose, Norell knows very well, but nevertheless keeps on presenting his pet hypothesis as if there was in fact some sort of support in its favor. Norell, of course, presents none – besides his academic and employment credentials.

So, to finally return to my original question. Can there be such a thing as security research of the type discussed in this post? Well, in a way there can, if only the researchers in this field behave as serious researchers in relation to the dramatic limitations of the field. The main effort to be done in this area seems to be about collecting and securing universal access to reliable data, including routines for checking these against each other, thereby improving basic tools such as statistical analyses of trends, and so forth and making them usable in a real research process. This is probably pretty frustrating for many of the people currently involved in this area – they, as we have seen, want to know the answers to the big questions! Unfortunately, that knowledge is unattainable as long as they neglect to secure the basic building blocks of any sort of social science research. At the same time, the way that the field has organised itself seems to work against the prospect of this happening any time in the future. Funding is coming mainly from organisations, the main interest of which is to withhold, distort or fabricate information on the basis of a political agenda of national interests. And when this is not the case, the very same organisations decide on limitations that make actual research impossible.