Details
The US government is requiring that academic institutions protect our research activities from foreign interference, especially countries that are attempting to get pre-publication access to research results so that they can use them for their own benefit. This session will provide an overview of Princeton’s efforts to develop a comprehensive Research Security program that balances our open and collaborative environment with these new government requirements.
The session will also go in-depth on three aspects of Princeton’s program: Conflict of Interest disclosures and how the University’s new system allows us to capture more detailed information; Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI) and how receipt of such information can be handled at Princeton; and the use of Digital Persistent Identifiers (ORCID) that will be required by federal agencies to improve identification of individual researchers, help streamline reporting processes and reduce administrative burden.