Freedom of information  laws are being misused to harass scientists and should be re-examined by the government, according to the president of the Royal Society.
Nobel laureate Sir Paul Nurse  told the Guardian that some climate scientists were being targeted by  organised campaigns of requests for data and other research materials,  aimed at intimidating them and slowing down research. He said the  behaviour was turning freedom of information  laws into a way to  intimidate some scientists.
Nurse's comments follow the launch of a major Royal Society study  into how scientists' work can be made more open and better used to  inform policy in society. The review – expected to be published next  year – will examine ways of improving access to scientific data and  research papers and how "digital media offer a powerful means for the  public to interrogate, question and re-analyse scientific priorities,  evidence and conclusions".
Nurse said that, in principle,  scientific information should be made available as widely as possible as  a matter of course, a practice common in biological research where gene  sequences are routinely published in public databases. But he said  freedom of information  had "opened a Pandora's box. It's released  something that we hadn't imagined ... there have been cases of it being  misused in the climate change debate to intimidate scientists.
"I  have been told of some researchers who are getting lots of requests  for, among other things, all drafts of scientific papers prior to their  publication in journals, with annotations, explaining why changes were  made between successive versions. If it is true, it will consume a huge  amount of time. And it's intimidating."
It was possible some  requests were designed simply to stop scientists working rather than as a  legitimate attempt to get research data, said Nurse. "It is essential  that scientists are as open and transparent as possible and, where they  are not, they should be held to account. But at times this appears to be  being used as a tool to stop scientists doing their work. That's going  to turn us into glue. We are just not going to be able to operate  efficiently."
Nurse said the government should examine the issue,  and think about tweaking freedom of information  legislation to  recognise potential misuse. Otherwise, he predicted,  FoI aggression  could be in future used by campaigners to cripple scientific research in  many other controversial areas of science, such as genetically modified  crops. "I don't actually know the answer but I think we have a problem  here. We need better guidelines about when the use of freedom of  information  is useful."
Bob Ward of the Grantham Research  Institute at the London School of Economics said the intention of many  of those making freedom of information  requests was to trawl through  scientists' work with the intention of trying to find problems and  errors. "It's also quite true that these people do not care about the  fact that it is causing a serious inconvenience," he said. "It is being  used in an aggressive and organised way. When freedom of information   legislation was first contemplated, it was not being considered that  universities would be landed with this additional burden."
Evidence of the aggression first began to emerge when personal emails and documents were stolen from the University of East Anglia's  (UEA) servers in November 2009 and leaked on to the internet. Climate  sceptics seized on the contents as evidence that apparently showed  scientists were colluding to keep errors in their research hidden and  prevent rivals' research from being published at all.
In an independent inquiry a year later, the scientists at the UEA's climatic research unit (CRU) were cleared of any misconduct,  but Muir Russell, the former civil servant who led the investigation,  found a "consistent pattern of failing to display the proper degree of  openness", although he stressed he had no reason to doubt the CRU team's  honesty or integrity.
"The current fog of ambiguity concerning,  for example, drafts of research papers produced in other countries is  deeply damaging to our scientific standing," said Tom Ward, pro  vice-chancellor at UEA. "Part of the discussion should be informed by  what we can learn from Scottish and US law, which explicitly recognise  the need to extend some protection to research in progress."
Myles  Allen, a climate scientist at the University of Oxford, said he has  been involved in many long-running exchanges with people making freedom  of information  requests for his data. "In the case that went on the  longest, I answered all the guy's questions. I spent half a day writing a  long email explaining the answers to all his questions, but it wasn't  really that which he was after: he was after some procedural questions  about IPCC [Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change]. He wanted some  evidence that an IPCC statement had been changed – it wasn't about  science at all; it was about procedure."
He added: "I can see what  someone with a very specific political comment might gain from an  unguarded comment, but it's very hard to see how science or public  understanding of science gains from every exchange between scientists  being made public. No other discipline operates in that way. The net  effect of this, incidentally, is that senior people in government and  senior scientists close to government are basically just using the  telephone again. Which is very bad for science because email exchanges  are an extremely useful record."
Nurse said that scientists were  not blameless. At the University of East Anglia, they were too defensive  in their responses to freedom of information  requests over climate  change, but their experience was one among many that highlighted a need  for better training for scientists in the most appropriate way to  respond to information requests.
Ward agreed that most  universities do not have a very good grasp of the requirements of  freedom of information  law. But he added that researchers should be  able to have confidential conversations with colleagues and researchers  in other universities, and that it was increasingly difficult for  researchers to do that by email.
"There's no other walk of life  where every conversation you have ought to be made public," he said.  "There's a massive double standards because a lot of the people  submitting these requests are themselves not transparent at all. They  don't reveal their sources of funding or the details of what they're  doing behind the scenes."
He added that the best way for  scientists to respond was with more openness. "Scientists are going to  have to get used to the idea that transparency means being transparent  to your critics as well as your allies. You cannot pick and choose to  whom you are transparent," he said. "Increasingly it is going to be an  issue for anyone working in contentious areas. Part of retaining the  public's confidence and trust is transparency and openness, and  scientists should accept that that is part of the price of having the  people's trust."
by Alok Jha taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/may/25/freedom-information-laws-harass-scientists
 
 
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