Why I Declare a Conflict of Interest and You Should Not
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Date
2025
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Open Access Color
HYBRID
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Academic publishing is both an indication of scientific contribution and a currency for career advancement. This dual role gives rise to a normative scientific conflict: Does the structural incentive to publish constitute a conflict of interest (COI) that ought to be disclosed? In this paper, we address this conflict through an action research approach, engaging collaboratively and reflexively to answer four related questions: (1) What evidence suggests that researchers face a (financial) COI when publishing? (2) What are the benefits and drawbacks of explicitly acknowledging that publications function as academic currency? (3) How should such conflicts be disclosed? (4) Do mechanisms such as pre-registration and registered reports resolve these concerns? This paper contends that while researchers are clearly incentivised to publish, this interest need not necessarily constitute a conflict or be explicitly disclosed. Treating this issue as a normative scientific conflict does reveal the need for a shift in how researchers understand and navigate the subjective, self-interested dimensions of their work. We propose four key responses: (1) integrating discussions of COIs and biases more extensively into undergraduate science education, (2) promoting greater reflexivity in everyday research practice (e.g., through reflexivity journals, peer-led audit groups, and the reintegration of discussions on the historicity and cultural nature of research into scientific publications), (3) critically investigating institutional incentives and journal policies, and (4) proactively adopting methodological safeguards such as pre-registration. By addressing this conflict through action research, we demonstrate how normative tensions in science can be made productive - supporting both critical reflection and structural improvement.
Description
Keywords
Competing Interest, Action Research, Positionality, Reflexivity, Motivated Reasoning, Incentives, Psychology of Science
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
Citation
WoS Q
Q2
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Theory and Society
Volume
54
Issue
Start Page
1137
End Page
1172
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Citations
Scopus : 0
Page Views
6
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