Table 1.
Overview of strategies for bending science: Categories and examplesa | |
---|---|
Shaping science: | Creating research to fit one’s needs; e.g. manipulating study design, research data and methods |
Hiding science: | Concealing unwelcome information, e.g. pharmaceutical industry hiding results from own research, demonstrating adverse effects of their products |
Attacking science: | These strategies are often in terms of ‘post-publication damage control’, particularly targeting policy-makers and the public, attacking study methods creating doubt about study validity: a) Turning reliable research into ‘junk’; e.g. claim research as ‘fatally flawed’ based on limited scientific grounds and voiced by hired experts b) illegitimate obfuscatory attacks; e.g. raising hypothetical charges about research design that are not supportable and not easily refuted; c) unbalanced attacks; e.g. allied attack where third parties without industry connection (think tanks) are engaged on the industry friendly side. |
Harrassing scientists | a) Challenge integrity of researchers, e.g. as publicized attacks b) Draining resources through lawsuits or unreasonable and burdensome demands for data and documents |
Packaging science | Assembling expert group to advance favoured outcome, e.g. by commissioning publications summarizing the state of science, which ignores or belittles unwelcome research. |
Spinning science | Manipulating public perceptions about credible science, e.g. campaigns to generate pressure on decision-makers to discount it. |
aBased on McGarity and Wagner, 2008: Bending science. How special interests corrupt public health research