Tag: nhmrc research misconduct

  • NHMRC Research Misconduct: The Australian Code

    NHMRC research misconduct is not something Australia’s National Health and Medical Research Council investigates itself. Under the Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research 2018, misconduct is defined as a serious breach that is intentional, reckless or negligent, and it is the funded research institution — not NHMRC — that runs the investigation, with NHMRC acting only as funder, policy owner and post-finding decision-maker.

    The Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research is the joint national framework issued by NHMRC, the Australian Research Council (ARC) and Universities Australia that sets the principles, responsibilities and breach-handling model every publicly funded Australian researcher and institution must follow.

    What Counts as Research Misconduct Under the Code?

    The 2018 Code replaced “misconduct” as the primary compliance concept with “breach” — any failure to uphold the Code’s principles of honesty, rigour, transparency, fairness, respect and accountability, classified on a spectrum from minor to serious.

    Research misconduct is the Code’s recommended label for the top of that spectrum: a serious breach that is also intentional, reckless or negligent. Institutions need not use the word “misconduct” in their own policies, letting them run Code investigations separately from unrelated processes such as enterprise-agreement discipline.

    • Fabrication, falsification and plagiarism are the clearest examples of serious breaches.
    • Failure to obtain ethics approval, authorship disputes and data-management failures can also qualify if reckless or negligent.
    • Honest error and genuine differences of scientific judgement are explicitly excluded.

    This is deliberately broader than some overseas definitions — a point that matters when Australian findings are compared with those from other countries (see the jurisdiction comparison below).

    Does NHMRC Investigate Research Misconduct Itself?

    No. NHMRC’s own position is unambiguous: it does not investigate allegations of research misconduct or potential breaches of the Code. That responsibility sits with the “Administering Institution” — the university, medical research institute or hospital that receives the NHMRC grant.

    NHMRC’s role is defined by its Research Integrity and Misconduct Policy, first issued 31 May 2019, which requires Administering Institutions to notify NHMRC when a potential or confirmed serious breach involves NHMRC-funded research. NHMRC then decides on its own precautionary or consequential actions — separate from, and after, the institution’s investigation.

    • Precautionary actions can be applied while an investigation is still under way.
    • Consequential actions follow a confirmed finding and can include recovering grant funds or restricting future funding applications.

    How Are Potential Breaches Investigated?

    Investigations follow the Guide to Managing and Investigating Potential Breaches of the Australian Code, produced jointly by NHMRC, ARC and Universities Australia as the practical companion to the Code. It sets a model process rather than a single mandatory procedure, so implementation varies by institution size and history.

    The Guide’s stages typically run:

    • Initial assessment — a triage step to check the complaint has substance.
    • Preliminary assessment — an “assessment officer” makes enquiries and reports to a “designated officer”, who decides whether a breach occurred and how serious it is.
    • Investigation — for potential misconduct, a panel hears the case, the respondent can answer the allegations, and a report goes to a senior “responsible executive officer” for decision.

    Because each institution runs its own process, outcomes and timeliness are not standardised nationally — a gap a 2026 peer-reviewed analysis in Accountability in Research flagged as producing inconsistent handling of comparable allegations.

    What Role Does ARIC Play, and What Happens After a Finding?

    The Australian Research Integrity Committee (ARIC), jointly established by NHMRC and ARC, is the only national review body in the system. Both complainants and respondents can ask ARIC to review whether an institution’s process was procedurally fair and consistent with the Guide.

    ARIC does not re-investigate the facts or overturn the finding — it reviews process only. Its annual reporting shows it typically completes only a handful of reviews a year, fewer than one per Australian university, reflecting how rarely a case escalates beyond the institution.

    Where ARIC identifies a process failure, it makes recommendations to the NHMRC CEO, who can advise the institution to take remedial action. There is no independent statutory body that can compel a rerun of the investigation or impose sanctions directly on a researcher.

    How Does Australia’s Model Compare With the UK and US?

    Searchers comparing “research misconduct Australia” with UK practice are usually asking one thing: is there a national investigator anywhere, or is it always institution-led? The honest answer, across all three major English-speaking research systems, is that none of them has a single statutory national investigator who runs the case itself — but the definitions and oversight layers differ sharply.

    Jurisdiction Governing framework Definition scope Who investigates National oversight
    Australia Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research 2018 Broad — any serious, intentional/reckless/negligent breach Institution (Administering Institution) ARIC — process-fairness review only
    United Kingdom Concordat to Support Research Integrity Set by each institution under Concordat principles Institution (university/employer) UKRIO — independent advisory body, no investigative powers
    United States ORI Public Health Service Policy Narrow — fabrication, falsification, plagiarism (FFP) only Institution, with federal ORI review of PHS-funded cases Office of Research Integrity — federal, statutory

    The UK’s Concordat, stewarded by Universities UK, obliges signatories to publish an annual integrity statement, but UKRIO is an independent charity offering advice, not a regulator with enforcement powers. The US ORI is the outlier: a genuine federal body with a narrower, FFP-only statutory definition applied to Public Health Service-funded research. Australia sits between the two — a broader definition than the US, but the same institution-led investigation model as the UK.

    Answer-First Q&A

    Why can’t I find a public register of research misconduct cases at UQ or UNSW?

    Australia has no national public register of institutional misconduct findings. Because Administering Institutions like the University of Queensland and UNSW investigate and report internally, case-level detail is disclosed only where a university chooses to publish a summary or a case reaches the media.

    What is the difference between a “breach” and “research misconduct”?

    A breach is any failure to meet the Code’s principles, ranging from minor to serious. Research misconduct is the Code’s recommended term specifically for a serious breach that is also intentional, reckless or negligent — not every breach meets that threshold.

    What happens if a university’s investigation is handled poorly?

    A complainant or respondent can ask the Australian Research Integrity Committee (ARIC) to review the institution’s process for procedural fairness. ARIC cannot overturn the finding itself; it can only recommend remedial action to the NHMRC CEO if the process fell short of the Guide.

    Can NHMRC withdraw funding over a misconduct finding?

    Yes. Once an Administering Institution confirms a serious breach involving NHMRC-funded research, NHMRC can apply consequential actions, including recovering grant funds and restricting the researcher’s eligibility for future NHMRC funding applications.

    Implications for Research Administrators

    For research administration teams, the practical takeaway is that compliance obligations sit almost entirely at institutional level. Reporting duties to NHMRC are triggered by the funding agreement, not by any external monitoring, so administrators must build their own notification and case-management workflows against the Guide rather than waiting for national instruction.

    • Track breach classifications consistently, since only “serious” and “intentional/reckless/negligent” breaches trigger NHMRC notification.
    • Document Initial Assessment, Preliminary Assessment and Investigation stages separately — ARIC reviews are won or lost on procedural record-keeping.
    • Expect scrutiny to intensify: the February 2026 ARC–NHMRC Joint Statement on Integrity confirms both agencies are working with Universities Australia to reassess how the system performs.

    Teams treating the Guide as a floor rather than a ceiling — with clearer public reporting than the Code strictly requires — will be better placed if a national oversight body is eventually introduced.

    Where the Framework Is Heading

    Australia’s institution-led model has faced sustained sector criticism for inconsistent outcomes between universities, most visibly the Australian Academy of Science’s 2023 call for a two-tiered national oversight system. The February 2026 ARC–NHMRC Joint Statement signals a formal review is now under way, though no legislative change has yet been announced.

    Until that review concludes, the core structure remains stable: NHMRC sets policy and funding consequences, institutions investigate, and ARIC reviews process — not verdicts. Anyone searching for how a specific case was handled should expect to find that information at the institution, not at NHMRC.

  • Who Handles Research Misconduct in 4 Countries?

    Who handles research misconduct depends entirely on the jurisdiction: no single global regulator exists. The United States channels federally funded cases through the Office of Research Integrity (ORI) under 42 CFR Part 93; the UK relies on individual universities advised by the UK Research Integrity Office (UKRIO); Australia splits oversight between the NHMRC/ARC-run Australian Research Integrity Committee (ARIC) and institutions applying the Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research; and Canada’s Tri-Agency Secretariat on Responsible Conduct of Research (SRCR) enforces the Tri-Agency Framework across CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC-funded work. In all four systems, the employing institution — not the national body — conducts the actual investigation.

    Research misconduct is fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism in proposing, performing, reviewing, or reporting research — a definition first codified in US federal regulation and echoed, with local variation, across the other three systems discussed below.

    Contents

    Who actually investigates research misconduct?

    In every major research system, the first-line investigator is the researcher’s own institution, not a national regulator. National bodies — ORI, UKRIO, ARIC, and Canada’s SRCR — exist to set standards, provide oversight, and in some cases review procedural fairness, but they rarely re-investigate the underlying facts themselves.

    This “institution-first” model is near-universal because misconduct findings usually require discipline-specific expertise, access to lab notebooks, data, and witnesses that only the host institution can readily obtain. National oversight bodies then step in at different points: before a case (setting definitions and required procedures), during it (advising or auditing), or after it (reviewing the outcome or deciding on federal funding consequences).

    United States: the Office of Research Integrity (ORI)

    The Office of Research Integrity (ORI), part of the US Department of Health and Human Services, oversees misconduct involving research funded by the Public Health Service, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH). ORI does not typically conduct the initial fact-finding itself.

    • Institutions receiving PHS funding must maintain written misconduct policies compliant with 42 CFR Part 93, the federal research misconduct regulation.
    • Institutions run the inquiry and investigation; ORI oversees the process, can require corrective action, and can impose federal funding debarment.
    • The National Science Foundation (NSF) runs a parallel, separate process for NSF-funded research through its Office of Inspector General.
    • ORI’s statutory definition of research misconduct — fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism — is the reference definition most other countries cite or adapt.

    United Kingdom: institutions advised by UKRIO

    The UK has no statutory national investigator. Responsibility sits with the employing university or research organisation, which must operate a misconduct procedure consistent with the Concordat to Support Research Integrity (Universities UK, 2019).

    • The UK Research Integrity Office (UKRIO) is an independent charity, not a regulator — it provides advice, a model investigation procedure, and training, but has no statutory power to investigate or sanction.
    • UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), the national funder, requires funded organisations to have robust misconduct procedures as a condition of grant funding, per its Grant Research Practice policy.
    • The newer UK Committee on Research Integrity (UK CORI) monitors sector-wide research integrity but does not investigate individual cases either.
    • Appeals, where permitted, are handled internally by the institution, managed by someone other than the original decision-maker.

    Australia: NHMRC, ARC and the Australian Research Integrity Committee

    Australia operates a shared responsibility model. Institutions investigate under the Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research (2018), jointly issued by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), the Australian Research Council (ARC), and Universities Australia.

    • The Australian Research Integrity Committee (ARIC), a joint NHMRC/ARC initiative, reviews the process an institution followed — not the substance of the misconduct finding — when a complainant or respondent challenges procedural fairness.
    • NHMRC and ARC can withdraw or withhold funding from institutions found not to comply with the Code, giving Australia a funding-conditionality lever similar to the US ORI model.
    • Unlike the US and UK, Australia has an explicit national committee (ARIC) with a formal review remit, though it stops short of full investigative authority — a gap frequently raised in Australian research-integrity policy debate.

    Canada: the Tri-Agency Framework and SRCR

    Canada’s three federal granting agencies — the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC), and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) — jointly known as the Tri-Agency, govern misconduct through the Tri-Agency Framework: Responsible Conduct of Research.

    • The Secretariat on Responsible Conduct of Research (SRCR) administers the Framework, advises institutions, and tracks cases, but institutions conduct the actual investigation.
    • Institutions receiving Tri-Agency funds must sign a Memorandum of Understanding agreeing to investigate allegations under the Framework and report outcomes to the SRCR.
    • Consequences for non-compliance can include suspension or termination of Tri-Agency funding to the institution or individual — the same funding-lever mechanism used by ORI and NHMRC/ARC.

    Side-by-side comparison of powers and remit

    The table below summarises where investigative authority actually sits, and what each national body can and cannot do.

    Jurisdiction National body Who investigates National body’s actual power Governing framework
    United States Office of Research Integrity (ORI) Institution Oversight, funding debarment for PHS-funded research 42 CFR Part 93
    United Kingdom UKRIO (advisory charity) Institution Advice, model procedure — no statutory power Concordat to Support Research Integrity (2019)
    Australia ARIC (NHMRC/ARC joint committee) Institution Procedural-fairness review; funding conditionality via NHMRC/ARC Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research (2018)
    Canada SRCR (Tri-Agency Secretariat) Institution Framework administration; funding suspension via Tri-Agency Tri-Agency Framework: Responsible Conduct of Research

    The consistent pattern: every national body relies on funding conditionality — not direct investigative power — as its main enforcement lever. Only the institution has authority to determine the facts of a specific allegation.

    Answer-first Q&A

    Who investigates research misconduct?

    The employing research institution investigates in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada. National bodies such as ORI, UKRIO, ARIC, and the SRCR set standards, provide advice, or review process fairness, but they do not typically conduct the fact-finding themselves — institutional panels of academic peers do.

    Which agencies oversee research misconduct?

    In the US, the Office of Research Integrity and the institution jointly oversee PHS-funded cases. The NSF Office of Inspector General covers NSF grants separately. In the UK, UKRI sets funding conditions while UKRIO advises. In Australia, NHMRC and ARC jointly run ARIC. In Canada, the Tri-Agency (CIHR, NSERC, SSHRC) oversees via the SRCR.

    What counts as research misconduct?

    Research misconduct generally means fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism in proposing, performing, reviewing, or reporting research — the core US federal definition. UKRIO frames it more broadly as behaviours that deliberately or recklessly fall short of expected research standards, distinguishing it from honest error or lesser “questionable research practices.”

    What happens if research misconduct is confirmed?

    Confirmed findings can trigger institutional disciplinary action, correction or retraction of the published record, and notification of funders. National bodies can add consequences: ORI can debar researchers from federal funding; NHMRC/ARC and Canada’s Tri-Agency can suspend or withdraw institutional or individual grant funding.

    What this means for institutions and researchers

    Institutions operating across borders — a common reality for multinational research collaborations — must satisfy multiple, non-equivalent oversight regimes simultaneously. A joint US-UK-Australia project can trigger three separate procedural obligations: 42 CFR Part 93 compliance for PHS funding, Concordat-aligned procedures for UK partners, and Australian Code compliance for NHMRC/ARC-funded co-investigators.

    Research administrators should map which funders and jurisdictions apply before a misconduct concern arises, not after. Confirming institutional procedures satisfy every applicable framework — rather than assuming one national standard covers a whole consortium — reduces the risk of a finding being challenged on procedural grounds in a partner jurisdiction.

    The direction of travel in all four systems is toward tighter funder-driven conditionality rather than new statutory investigative powers: expect national bodies to keep strengthening reporting and audit requirements on institutions, rather than assuming direct investigation duties themselves.