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Minister criticised for science select committee no-show

Senior MP says Sam Gyimah's failure to answer questions about research integrity may lead scholars to conclude area is 'not a ministerial priority'

Published on
March 5, 2018
Last updated
March 5, 2018
Sam Gyimah

Sam Gyimah, the UK government's universities and science minister, has been criticised for declining to attend聽a parliamentary select committee looking at research integrity.

惭谤听骋测颈尘补丑听was due to appear before the Commons聽Science and Technology Committee alongside UK Research & Innovation chief executive Sir Mark Walport on 6 March.

However, in a published by the committee on 5 March, Mr Gyimah explains that聽he will not attend the final session of the inquiry into research integrity.

In his letter, he says that Sir Mark is 鈥渂etter placed鈥 to answer specific questions on the issue of research integrity and 鈥渋t would be a better use of the committee members鈥 time to focus questions on research integrity to UKRI, as opposed to myself as a government minister鈥.

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Responding to Mr Gyimah鈥檚 decision, the committee鈥檚 chair Norman Lamb MP he was 鈥渄isappointed that the science minister has decided not to appear before the committee next week, to answer our questions on research integrity.鈥

鈥淗e tells us that the detail of how government-funded research is undertaken, and its standards and integrity, is not a matter for him,鈥 added Mr Lamb, who said this attitude 鈥渞isks pre-judging our questions, including on the scope and appetite for a different regulatory approach in this area鈥.

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Mr Lamb added that it would still 鈥渃losely probe the minister鈥檚 position in the session with Sir Mark Walport鈥, but that Mr Gyimah鈥檚 鈥渘on-attendance risks the research community concluding that this important area is not a ministerial priority.鈥

The hearing was due to consider trends and developments in research fraud, misconduct and mistakes in research and the publication of research results at universities.

Last month Mr Gyimah did, however, give evidence at a hearing on the issue of free speech on campus.

He told the Joint Committee for Human Rights, chaired by Harriet Harman, on 7 February, that he was concerned about 鈥渁 creeping culture of censorship in our universities鈥 and a number of recent events 鈥 including a brief scuffle between activists and Tory MP Jacob Rees Mogg at a student event in Bristol on 3 February 鈥 had given him cause for concern, adding that 鈥渢hese restrictions and disruptions are unacceptable鈥.

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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