A national supervision committee has been set up by the Ministry
of Education to curb violations of academic rights in social
sciences, officials said yesterday.
The move follows the issuing of a professional code of conduct
for natural scientists by the Chinese Association of Science and
Technology on Wednesday.
"Plagiarism and fake research have become rampant in China, and
are eroding people's trust in academia," committee director Zhang
Qizhi, said at a press conference in Beijing.
"The launch of the committee may help supervise academic
corruption and misconduct in social sciences by working out the
relevant rules and regulations," said Zhang.
The committee, which consists of 30 scholars from more than 20
colleges and other learning institutions nationwide, will set
detailed rules on the criteria and punishment for academic
violations, as well as investigating some cases, added Zhang.
Violators will face administrative punishments including
dismissal, and could even be brought to trial depending on the
circumstances, said Education Minister Zhou Ji at a ministry
meeting on Tuesday.
"Candidates cannot be promoted or awarded if academic misconduct
is found," he stressed.
The ministry's decision has received a warm welcome from
academics.
He Weifang, a law professor at Peking University, said he was
happy to see the committee established, but said all checking
procedures must be transparent.
He also said the committee should not replace committees set up
by individual schools, as "administrative powers should not
interfere too much in academic circles."
(China Daily May 26, 2006)