The Health Professions Council (HPC) has ruled that a professor who used sections of his student鈥檚 dissertation in a research paper was not guilty of misconduct.
Remco Polman, a professor at the University of Central Lancashire鈥檚 Centre for Applied Sport and Exercise Sciences, appeared before a conduct panel on 5 March charged with having 鈥渞eproduced substantial sections鈥 from Jeannette Cohen鈥檚 dissertation without her permission. He was also accused of signing a copyright agreement with the journal鈥檚 publisher, Taylor and Francis, without her consent.
The HPC鈥檚 own lawyer told the hearing that Ms Cohen did not own the copyright to her dissertation, and the case was dismissed.
The allegation related to a paper published in the Journal of Sports Sciences in 2007, when Professor Polman was based at the University of Hull.
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The paper listed Ms Cohen as third author.
The professor had supervised Ms Cohen鈥檚 MSc dissertation when they were both at Leeds Metropolitan University.
Ms Cohen argued that the research in the paper was essentially hers and that Professor Polman had no right to sign the copyright agreement.
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She complained to the British Psychological Society in 2008, which referred the case to a conduct committee. The HPC took over the case after it became responsible for monitoring the professional conduct of psychologists.
At the hearing in London last week, the HPC took two minutes to find that there was no case to answer.
The lawyer for the HPC, Chris Whalley, said he had reviewed the Leeds Met regulations on students鈥 intellectual property rights and the assignment of those rights.
鈥淗aving considered these regulations in detail, Mr Whalley further advised the panel that Jeannette Cohen was not the legal owner of the material which was the subject of the allegations,鈥 the HPC tribunal report says.
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鈥淚n those circumstances, he offered no evidence on behalf of the HPC in relation to all allegations set out in the HPC bundle.鈥
The conduct panel concluded that because the HPC had not demonstrated that there was any breach of copyright, there was no misconduct case against Professor Polman to answer.
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