Applied Economics Teaching Resources

an AAEA Journal

Agricultural and Applied Economics Association

Responsible Conduct of Research for Graduate Students: What Should They Know?

Nixon S. Chekeny(a) and Sukant Misra(a)
(a)Texas Tech University

JEL Codes: JEL Codes: A11, B41, Q10
Keywords: Graduate students, research misconduct, social sciences

Publish Date: October 21, 2024

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Abstract

This paper provides exploratory evidence on research misconduct in social sciences with an emphasis on applied economics. We review peer-reviewed published work to discuss how these trends of research misconduct compromise the trust, honesty, reliability, and credibility of scientific work. In addition, we offer suggestions to incorporate content on the responsible conduct of research in graduate education in social sciences. This paper should be of interest to graduate programs and academics interested in graduate education in applied economics, and likely benefit graduate students in social sciences as they build their research profiles and establish a reputation in the field.

About the Authors: Nixon S. Chekenya is a PhD Student at Texas Texas Tech University ( Corresponding Author Email: nixon.chekenya@ttu.edu). Sukant Misra is a Professor at Texas Tech University.

Acknowledgments: We are grateful to comments by Elisha K. Denkyirah, Darren Hudson, Carlos Carpio, Chenggang Wang, Phillip Johnson and seminar participants at Texas Tech University. All errors are our own responsibility. Parts of this paper were written while Nixon Chekenya was affiliated with the department of Agricultural and Applied Economics at Texas Tech University.

Copyright is governed under Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA

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