Research Policy Handbook

1.4

Openness in Research

Policy Authority

Senate of the Academic Council

Now in Policy Details

Expresses Stanford's commitment to openness in research; defines and prohibits secrecy, including limitations on publishability of results; specifies certain provisions that are acceptable under this policy.

1. Resolved

That the principle of openness in research - the principle of freedom of access by all interested persons to the underlying data, processes, and to the final results of research - is one of overriding importance. Accordingly, it is the decision of the Senate that this principle be implemented so that no program of research that requires secrecy (as hereafter defined) be conducted at Stanford University, subject to the provisions set forth in Section 4. of this Resolution.

2. A Research Program Shall be Regarded as Requiring Secrecy

That a research program shall be regarded as requiring secrecy:

  • If any part of the sponsoring or granting documents that establish the project is not freely publishable
  • If there is a reasonable basis for expectation that any documents to be generated in the course of the research project will be subjected by an outside sponsor to restrictions on publication for a period in excess of that reasonably required (more than 90 days) so that the sponsor can ascertain whether information he or she is entitled to have treated as confidential would be disclosed by publication
  • If access will be required in the course of the project to confidential data so centrally related to the research that a member of the research group who was not privy to the confidential data would be unable to participate fully in all of the intellectually significant portions of the project

3. Rules Adopted by the Academic Council

The rules adopted by the Academic Council on September 29, 1967, are hereby amended and, as amended, are reaffirmed:

  1. No research on a thesis or dissertation should be undertaken if, at the time the topic is set, there is any substantial possibility that it will lead to a secret thesis or dissertation.
  2.  No secret thesis or dissertation should be accepted as the basis for a degree.
  3. Scholarly activities not accessible for scrutiny by the entire Advisory Board should not be considered in connection with appointments, reappointments or promotions.
  4. The University should enter no contract and accept no grant to carry out research if the grant or contract restrains the freedom of the University to disclose the:
  • Existence of the contract or grant or,
  • General nature of the inquiry to be conducted or,
  • Identity of the outside contracting or granting entity or,
  • The research results

provided that this clause shall not apply either (a) to anonymous gifts or grants that do not call for the performance of specified lines of inquiry, or (b) to research grants or contracts from individuals or non-governmental entities who request anonymity out of a justifiable motivation to protect individual privacy.

4. Programs of Research With Certain Provisions That Are Allowable

A. Living Human Beings

In a program of research involving the examination, through interview techniques or otherwise, of a living human being, reasonable provision may be made to protect the rights of that individual to privacy.

B. National Security Controls

In a program of research, the purposes of which would be significantly advanced by access to information generated elsewhere that had been subjected to export or other national security controls, provision may be made for access to that information on the part of one of several of the participating investigators provided that the information falling under national security controls is peripheral to the research program in the following sense: the relationship between the data falling under national security controls and the overall research endeavor must be sufficiently remote so that

  • a member of the research group who is restricted from accessing the data falling under national security controls would nevertheless be able to participate fully in all of the intellectually significant portions of the project (i.e., would not be placed at an intellectual disadvantage by the access restriction); and
  • there is no substantial basis for an expectation that any part of the final results of the research, or any but a trivial part of the research processes, will be subject to restriction on publication more enduring than those described in Section 2.

C. Publication Delays

In a program of sponsored research, provision may be made in the contractual agreement between Stanford and the sponsor for a delay in the publication of research results, in the following circumstances:

  1. For a short delay (the period of delay not to exceed 90 days), for patenting purposes or for sponsor review of and comment on manuscripts, providing that no basis exists at the beginning of the project to expect that the sponsor would attempt either to suppress publication or to impose substantive changes in the manuscripts.
  2. For a longer delay in the case of multi-site clinical research (the period of delay not to exceed 24 months from the completion of research at all sites), where a publication committee receives data from participating sites and makes decisions about joint publications. Such delays are permitted only if the Stanford investigator is assured the ability to publish without restrictions after the specified delay.
  3. When it is in the best interests of the research, the Vice Provost and Dean of Research may approve contractual arrangements that could lead to longer publication delays. Requests for the Dean to approve such contractual arrangements should include:
  • the rationale for the request
  • a description of who will have authority over publication decisions, and
  • a statement of the provisions that will allow the investigator to publish within a defined period of time, regardless of other considerations.

Under no circumstances should a faculty member engage a student or trainee in a project governed by an extended publication delay agreement or contractual arrangement that could present a barrier to the timely submission of the student's thesis or dissertation or to the publication of a trainee's work.

D. Confidentiality

If, in a program of research, an outside person or entity has made available to the investigator confidential information, provision may be made to preserve confidentiality and/or a short delay in the publication of research results during which time the information source may examine the proposed publication in order to assure that the investigator has not disclosed, intentionally or unintentionally, any portion of the confidential information supplied, provided that any such provision for delay must contain assurance from the information source that they will conduct their review as expeditiously as possible, that they will not attempt to thwart publication for any reason except to protect confidential information previously supplied, and that they will indicate with specificity a sentence or sentences which they contend constitute such a disclosure.

E. Private Papers, Documents, Diaries or Analogous Materials

If, in a program of research, private papers, documents, diaries or analogous materials have been provided to the investigator, provision may be made to preserve the confidentiality of those materials for the purpose of protecting the individual privacy of the author, or of the addressee.

5. Review

This policy shall be reviewed at least annually by the Committee on Research in one of its meetings. This meeting and others primarily devoted to considering a revision of research policy shall be announced publicly through the website of the Committee on Research and/or other suitable means.