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Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
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Alan Freeman <[log in to unmask]>
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Mon, 6 Apr 2009 10:16:52 -0400
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This fascinating discussion about plagiarism continues to have wider 
implications. As I see it, at stake is (1) the economist's ethical 
responsibility (2) its enforcement (3) the rights of victims of 
unethical conduct.

These are three different things. We may agree that economists should 
be ethical, but disagree on how to regulate it. We may disagree about 
regulation, but still protect the rights of victims. I am unpersuaded 
that 'ethical' can be equated to 'what can be prevented'. I am 
equally unpersuaded that if enforcement is lax, an abused victim 
should be denied redress.

An example from another galaxy may help. The UN charter of Human 
Rights, article 23, prescribes "the right to work, a decent wage, 
rest, holidays, and reasonable working hours". Article 26 prescribes 
that "Education shall be free, at least in the elementary and 
fundamental stages. Elementary education shall be compulsory. 
Technical and professional education shall be made generally 
available and higher education shall be equally accessible to all on 
the basis of merit". For that matter, the US constitution still 
prescribes  Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness." These are 
values, rights, ethical prescriptions. They are difficult to honour. 
Nevertheless, we should only rescind them if we cease to regard them 
as ethical. We should not negotiate them because they are difficult or costly.

I don't see any difference between this and ethical conduct in any 
sphere, from which I see no reason to exempt economics. To the 
contrary, a concept of ethics in economics is long-overdue, as 
pointed out in Colander et al's  must-read "The Financial Crisis and 
the Systemic Failure of Academic Economics" 
(<http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/papers/Dahlem_Report_EconCrisis021809.pdf>http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/papers/Dahlem_Report_EconCrisis021809.pdf). 
Here they say: "In our view, economists, as with all scientists, have 
an ethical responsibility ... Currently, there is no ethical code for 
professional economic scientists. There should be one." I agree.

The full quote (which I have abbreviated) articulates a specific 
ethical concern, the duty to communicate limitations. But the 
principle is general: if it's ethically required, it should be 
ethically prescribed. It should be codified. This introduces at least 
the minimum requirement of accountability. If our profession were to 
clearly and unequivocally pronounce (like Doctors, Architects, 
Planner, Engineers, Lawyers, Accountants.....) what is right and 
wrong conduct for an economist, then even if we ourselves can do 
nothing about it, we would at least have a standard against which 
economists, journals, HE institutions, public servants and for that 
matter, banks, can be judged by the public.

Codification must be protected from enforcement. Yes, it is difficult 
to protect against misrepresentation. It is also difficult to stop 
climate change. Both are still wrong. This line cannot be blurred.

Equally, 'should the victim have redress?' is at least autonomous 
from 'is it enforced?'. If a corrupt or lax regulator fails to 
protect me from fraud, I am allowed civil redress to reclaim the 
money of which I was defrauded. If we choose to throw up our hands 
and announce we cannot prevent plagiarism, then injured parties - 
whose entire careers are sometimes at stake, as this discussion has 
shown - must have the right to seek redress. Any other idea is 
morally inexcusable and ethically highly dangerous.

It was in this context I raised the use of copyright. It's an 
imperfect instrument, and it wasn't devised to catch plagiarism. But 
my advice to any victim is 'if it works, and if you need it to 
enforce a right not honoured, then use it'.

Regards
Alan Freeman

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