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Time for a more inclusive definition of plagiarism?

Alveteg, Mattias LU orcid (2010) 17th Improving Student Learning Symposium, 2009 17(For the Twenty-First Century Learner). p.194-200
Abstract
Commonly used definitions of plagiarism are misleading in that they seem to indicate that 1) plagiarism is associated with either intent or ignorance and that 2) the requirements for claiming ownership can be uniquely defined. However, the differences between coexisting socio-cultural contexts are large enough that a clear case of plagiarism in one context might even be considered as good practice in another. At the same time, being accused of plagiarism is one of the most serious allegations that can be made in academia and is not surprisingly often associated with strong emotions. Thus, accepting and trying to understand the differences between different contexts might feel threatening to a scientist as such an endeavour might result in... (More)
Commonly used definitions of plagiarism are misleading in that they seem to indicate that 1) plagiarism is associated with either intent or ignorance and that 2) the requirements for claiming ownership can be uniquely defined. However, the differences between coexisting socio-cultural contexts are large enough that a clear case of plagiarism in one context might even be considered as good practice in another. At the same time, being accused of plagiarism is one of the most serious allegations that can be made in academia and is not surprisingly often associated with strong emotions. Thus, accepting and trying to understand the differences between different contexts might feel threatening to a scientist as such an endeavour might result in questioning the integrity of ones own work.

In an attempt to address these problems I propose the use of definitions of plagiarism that are more inclusive and that explicitly address the socio-cultural perspective. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
cultural perspective, higher education, academic conduct
host publication
Improving Student Learning
editor
Rust, Chris
volume
17
issue
For the Twenty-First Century Learner
pages
219 pages
publisher
Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development
conference name
17th Improving Student Learning Symposium, 2009
conference location
London, United Kingdom
conference dates
2009-09-07 - 2009-09-09
ISBN
1-873576-79-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Contents listed at http://www.brookes.ac.uk/services/ocsld/books/improving_student_learning/twenty_first_century_learner.html Conference program available at http://www.brookes.ac.uk/services/ocsld/isl/isl2009/index.html
id
a7a80fbf-ef39-46b9-90c3-ee5b12917403 (old id 1670261)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:14:16
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:57:35
@inproceedings{a7a80fbf-ef39-46b9-90c3-ee5b12917403,
  abstract     = {{Commonly used definitions of plagiarism are misleading in that they seem to indicate that 1) plagiarism is associated with either intent or ignorance and that 2) the requirements for claiming ownership can be uniquely defined. However, the differences between coexisting socio-cultural contexts are large enough that a clear case of plagiarism in one context might even be considered as good practice in another. At the same time, being accused of plagiarism is one of the most serious allegations that can be made in academia and is not surprisingly often associated with strong emotions. Thus, accepting and trying to understand the differences between different contexts might feel threatening to a scientist as such an endeavour might result in questioning the integrity of ones own work.<br/><br>
In an attempt to address these problems I propose the use of definitions of plagiarism that are more inclusive and that explicitly address the socio-cultural perspective.}},
  author       = {{Alveteg, Mattias}},
  booktitle    = {{Improving Student Learning}},
  editor       = {{Rust, Chris}},
  isbn         = {{1-873576-79-3}},
  keywords     = {{cultural perspective; higher education; academic conduct}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{For the Twenty-First Century Learner}},
  pages        = {{194--200}},
  publisher    = {{Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development}},
  title        = {{Time for a more inclusive definition of plagiarism?}},
  volume       = {{17}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}