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Should academic misconduct be catalogued? Proposed US database sparks debate

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AI Legal Analyst
April 9, 2026, 10:23 PM 7 min read 9 views

Summary

A proposal published today in the journal Science 1 offers a solution, at least in the United States: creating a national database of people found guilty of data fabrication, workplace harassment and more, that would be accessed by research institutions before making new hires. This potentially enables a person to get hired by another university, which might not be aware of the previous misconduct, says Lauer, who for about ten years ran the extramural research programme at the US National Institutes of Health, a major funder of biomedical science. “We should make it much more difficult for offending scientists to evade accountability without there being appropriate transparency.” A legal requirement There is precedent for such a database: in the 1980s, the medical field faced a crisis, in which physicians who had engaged in misconduct were relocating across US state lines to escape their reputations, says Mark Barnes, a lawyer at Ropes & Gray in Boston, Massachusetts, who co-authored the proposal. Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university For the latest proposal to become a reality, Congress would need to take similar action to create a database, Lauer says. Article Google Scholar Download references Reprints and permissions Related Articles How to spot suspicious papers: a sleuthing guide for scientists How to stop ‘passing the harasser’: universities urged to join information-sharing scheme Research-integrity sleuths say their work is being ‘twisted’ to undermine science Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university Research misconduct: how the scientific community is fighting back Subjects Scientific community Institutions Latest on: Scientific community Institutions When career anxiety becomes gameplay: lessons from China’s ‘young-faculty simulator’ Career Column 08 APR 26 Representation without power in science isn’t equity Correspondence 07 APR 26 When page-renumbering causes outrage News & Views 07 APR 26 The hidden costs of ‘helpful’ AI World View 31 MAR 26 Geopolitical tensions are leading China to rethink research collaboration Nature Index 25 MAR 26 ‘Grade inflation’ hits PhD students.

## Summary
A proposal published today in the journal Science 1 offers a solution, at least in the United States: creating a national database of people found guilty of data fabrication, workplace harassment and more, that would be accessed by research institutions before making new hires. This potentially enables a person to get hired by another university, which might not be aware of the previous misconduct, says Lauer, who for about ten years ran the extramural research programme at the US National Institutes of Health, a major funder of biomedical science. “We should make it much more difficult for offending scientists to evade accountability without there being appropriate transparency.” A legal requirement There is precedent for such a database: in the 1980s, the medical field faced a crisis, in which physicians who had engaged in misconduct were relocating across US state lines to escape their reputations, says Mark Barnes, a lawyer at Ropes & Gray in Boston, Massachusetts, who co-authored the proposal. Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university For the latest proposal to become a reality, Congress would need to take similar action to create a database, Lauer says. Article Google Scholar Download references Reprints and permissions Related Articles How to spot suspicious papers: a sleuthing guide for scientists How to stop ‘passing the harasser’: universities urged to join information-sharing scheme Research-integrity sleuths say their work is being ‘twisted’ to undermine science Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university Research misconduct: how the scientific community is fighting back Subjects Scientific community Institutions Latest on: Scientific community Institutions When career anxiety becomes gameplay: lessons from China’s ‘young-faculty simulator’ Career Column 08 APR 26 Representation without power in science isn’t equity Correspondence 07 APR 26 When page-renumbering causes outrage News & Views 07 APR 26 The hidden costs of ‘helpful’ AI World View 31 MAR 26 Geopolitical tensions are leading China to rethink research collaboration Nature Index 25 MAR 26 ‘Grade inflation’ hits PhD students.

## Article Content
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Research misconduct can include a variety of infractions, including data fraud and manipulation.
Credit: Tom Werner/Getty
For decades, academic institutions have struggled with how to prevent researchers who have committed misconduct from securing jobs at new universities while hiding the bad behaviour. A proposal published today in the journal
Science
1
offers a solution, at least in the United States: creating a national database of people found guilty of data fabrication, workplace harassment and more, that would be accessed by research institutions before making new hires.
How to spot suspicious papers: a sleuthing guide for scientists
But scientists who spoke to
Nature
are divided over whether this centralized, confidential list would solve the problem or generate new ones.
Michael Lauer, one of the proposal’s authors, says that bad actors frequently evade accountability by resigning during an ongoing investigation at their university, or by agreeing to leave and sign a non-disparagement agreement with their institution, such that neither party can speak publicly about the incident.
This potentially enables a person to get hired by another university, which might not be aware of the previous misconduct, says Lauer, who for about ten years ran the extramural research programme at the US National Institutes of Health, a major funder of biomedical science. “We should make it much more difficult for offending scientists to evade accountability without there being appropriate transparency.”
A legal requirement
There is precedent for such a database: in the 1980s, the medical field faced a crisis, in which physicians who had engaged in misconduct were relocating across US state lines to escape their reputations, says Mark Barnes, a lawyer at Ropes & Gray in Boston, Massachusetts, who co-authored the proposal.
This prompted the US Congress to establish the National Practitioner Data Bank in 1990, which now holds over 1.9 million reports of malpractice, fraud and medical license suspensions. US hospitals are required by law to check this system before granting medical privileges and must repeat the query every two years to ensure the records of their staff members are up to date.
Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university
For the latest proposal to become a reality, Congress would need to take similar action to create a database, Lauer says. This way, US research institutions would be required by law to report misconduct cases to the repository and also query it periodically, including when hiring new researchers, he adds. The database would contain only instances where an investigation concluded and officially found research misconduct, not when someone has been accused of misconduct without any finding, he says.
Even when an institution concludes an investigation and finds misconduct, it is typically not compelled to share those results publicly, and rarely does so, Barnes says. That’s because universities fear they might be “sucked into litigation” if a scientist accuses them of defamation for advertising to potential employers about their misconduct record, he adds. “Fear can result in saying nothing — and so the cycle repeats itself, and the new employing institution is left flying blind.”
Sometimes misconduct cases are made public by federal oversight agencies, such as the Office of Research Integrity (ORI) at the NIH’s parent agency. Universities are required to report research-integrity concerns to such offices when scientists have received federal funds for their experiments. These agencies can then decide whether to investigate the alleged misconduct further and apply sanctions. But they often have few resources for handling every case, says Lisa Lee, senior associate vice president for research and innovation at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. ORI, for example,
released only two findings of research misconduct in 2025
.
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doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-01147-x
References
Lauer, M. & Barnes, M.
Science
392
, 127 (2026).
Article
Google Scholar
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Related Articles
How to spot suspicious papers: a sleuthing guide for scientists
How to stop ‘passing the harasser’: universities urged to join information-sharing scheme
Research-integrity sleuths say their work is being ‘twisted’ to undermine science
Superconductivity researcher who committed misconduct exits university
Research misconduct: how the scientific community is fighting back
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Scientific community
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When career anxiety becomes gameplay: lessons from China’s

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## Expert Analysis

### Merits
- But they often have few resources for handling every case, says Lisa Lee, senior associate vice president for research and innovation at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg.

### Areas for Consideration
- How to spot suspicious papers: a sleuthing guide for scientists But scientists who spoke to Nature are divided over whether this centralized, confidential list would solve the problem or generate new ones.
- This potentially enables a person to get hired by another university, which might not be aware of the previous misconduct, says Lauer, who for about ten years ran the extramural research programme at the US National Institutes of Health, a major funder of biomedical science. “We should make it much more difficult for offending scientists to evade accountability without there being appropriate transparency.” A legal requirement There is precedent for such a database: in the 1980s, the medical field faced a crisis, in which physicians who had engaged in misconduct were relocating across US state lines to escape their reputations, says Mark Barnes, a lawyer at Ropes & Gray in Boston, Massachusetts, who co-authored the proposal.

### Implications
- This potentially enables a person to get hired by another university, which might not be aware of the previous misconduct, says Lauer, who for about ten years ran the extramural research programme at the US National Institutes of Health, a major funder of biomedical science. “We should make it much more difficult for offending scientists to evade accountability without there being appropriate transparency.” A legal requirement There is precedent for such a database: in the 1980s, the medical field faced a crisis, in which physicians who had engaged in misconduct were relocating across US state lines to escape their reputations, says Mark Barnes, a lawyer at Ropes & Gray in Boston, Massachusetts, who co-authored the proposal.
- That’s because universities fear they might be “sucked into litigation” if a scientist accuses them of defamation for advertising to potential employers about their misconduct record, he adds. “Fear can result in saying nothing — and so the cycle repeats itself, and the new employing institution is left flying blind.” Sometimes misconduct cases are made public by federal oversight agencies, such as the Office of Research Integrity (ORI) at the NIH’s parent agency.

### Expert Commentary
This article covers research, misconduct, university topics. Notable strengths include discussion of research. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 942.
research misconduct university nature institutions science national scientists

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