International experts on the responsible use of research metrics have warned the University of Liverpool against making redundancies based on research grant income and citation impact scores.
The authors of the Leiden Manifesto and David Moher, lead author of the Hong Kong Principles, both of which encourage the research community to use metrics more responsibly, have written letters condemning Liverpool鈥檚 criteria for cutting 47 research jobs from its Faculty of Health and Life Sciences.
The University and College Union has said that the university is planning to assess individual research grant income and citation impact scores, with the 47 academics deemed the worst performing in line for redundancy by May.
In a letter to Dame Janet Beer, Liverpool鈥檚 vice-chancellor, Professor Moher, an expert in scientific publishing at the University of Ottawa, calls on the university to reverse its decision to make staff redundant 鈥渧ia the inappropriate use of research metrics鈥.
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Assessing academics in this way fails to recognise their collegial or 鈥済oodwill鈥 contributions, such as teamwork or mentoring early career researchers, which are so important to academia, he says. 聽
The application of quantitative metrics in a mass redundancy exercise is 鈥渁 major issue of concern鈥, Professor Moher continues. 鈥淭he timing of this, at such a crucial time for debates in the academe, threatens to set back the responsible use of metrics in the sector,鈥 he says.
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鈥淚nappropriate use of research metrics incentivises poor science, corner-cutting, and data massaging; while creating insecure, untrustworthy, and low-morale research cultures.鈥
In a letter of solidarity to Liverpool鈥檚 UCU branch, which has condemned the cuts, the authors of the Leiden Manifesto condemn the university鈥檚 use of metrics, because they 鈥渃an be biased in various ways鈥 and add that the function of a university is much more than acquiring citations and funding.
Ismael Rafols, Ludo Waltman, Sarah de Rijcke, and Paul Wouters, all at the Centre for Science and Technology Studies at Leiden University, say that the 鈥減roposal seriously contravenes the principles of ethical and responsible use of research metrics鈥 as stated in the Leiden Manifesto but also the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (Dora), which Liverpool is signed up to.
Liverpool highlights both of these, and the Hong Kong Principles, on聽聽as useful resources on the responsible use of metrics.聽
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鈥淲e regard the application of quantitative metrics in a mass redundancy as a major threat for recent initiatives on responsible research metrics,鈥 the Leiden authors say. It would also make Liverpool the first university in Europe to do so.
David Whyte, vice-president of Liverpool鈥檚 UCU, welcomed the letters of support. Liverpool鈥檚 plan was 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 and undermined the principles of team science, he said.
鈥淭o have the support of the world鈥檚 foremost experts in responsible metrics is important.聽The university聽has been told unequivocally that the international research community finds this attempt to make respected researchers unemployed in the middle of the pandemic both unethical and unacceptable,鈥 he said.
More than 200 members of staff at Liverpool have also signed an open letter criticising the redundancy metrics.
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A spokeswoman for the university said that the聽measures that have been proposed 鈥渁re subject to collective consultation and are confidential within that process, but I can confirm they are based on transparent and measurable outputs, benchmarked against our Russell Group comparators and the relevant academic discipline.聽The proposed measures have been considered carefully, in line with relevant codes of practice related to the responsible use of research metrics.鈥
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