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  1. Research that is not relevant in the location where it is undertaken imposes burdens without benefits. ARTICLE 4. Local researchers should be included, wherever possible, throughout the research process, including in study design, study implementation, data ownership, intellectual property and authorship of publications. ARTICLE 2.

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  2. On 7th June 2023, at an evening reception in the UNESCO headquarters in Paris, the code received a new name. Instead of Global Code of Conduct for Research in Resource-Poor Settings, the code is now called: The TRUST Code with the optional subtitle A Global Code of Conduct for Equitable Research Partnerships.

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  4. The Global Code of Conduct for Research in Resource-Poor Settings aims to stop the export of unethical research practices to low and middle income countries. The First Adopters In August 2018, the European Commission adopted the Global Code as a mandatory reference document for Horizon 2020.

    • External Engagement with Research Policymakers
    • External Engagement with Research Funders
    • External Engagement with Researchers
    • Engagement with Research Participants and Research Communities
    • Advocate Voices For Animals
    • External Engagement with Research Ethics Committees

    National research foundations, research councils and government ministries guide the strategic direction of research. Representatives from all of these groups attended the TRUST plenary in Cape Town in 2017, in particular senior representatives from the following national bodies: 1. The South African Department of Science and Technology 2. The Sout...

    Estimates for research and development expenditure in the European Union in 2016 indicate that 56.6% of all such expenditure comes from the business sector, 30.9% from the government sector and the remainder mostly from charitable foundations (Eurostat 2018). TRUST’s main consultation workshop for research funders was held in London in 2017 and inv...

    The consortium that drafted the GCC represented a wide range of academic disciplines, namely ethics, medicine, economics, bioethics, law, social psychology, sociology, psychology, gender studies, chemistry, social sciences, psychiatry, biology, zoology, veterinary medicine, political science and management. The multidisciplinary nature of the conso...

    The inclusion of the perspectives of research participants and research communities who are vulnerable to exploitation, and therefore to ethics dumping, was essential to our bottom-up approach. It is also the ethical approach, as stipulated in article 2 of the GCC: Two NGO partners in the TRUST project were tasked specifically with ensuring that th...

    A senior veterinarian, Professor David Morton, was involved throughout the TRUST project as an adviser. At a plenary meeting in Cape Town, he described how animals had no voice and therefore no choice about involvement in research. He asked: “Who consents on behalf of animals?” There are currently no globally agreed ethical standards for research i...

    The main engagement meetings with research ethics reviewers and chairs of research ethics committees took place in India (2016) and Kenya (2017). The Forum for Ethics Review Committees in India is led by Dr Vasantha Muthuswamy, who was responsible for issuing the Indian Council of Medical Research’s Ethical Guidelines for Biomedical Research on Hum...

    • Doris Schroeder, Kate Chatfield, Michelle Singh, Roger Chennells, Peter Herissone-Kelly
    • 2019
  5. 2 PwC’s Code of Conduct Table of contents Message from our Global Chair 3 Message from our Global Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer 4 Living our Purpose and Values 5 The Code in context 6 Speak up 7 Build trust in how we do business 9 Build trust with each other 17 Build trust in our communities 21 Build trust in how we use information 25

  6. It is essential to compensate local research support systems, for instance translators, interpreters or local coordinators, fairly for their contribution to research projects. The development of the Global Code of Conduct for Research in Resource-Poor Settings has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation ...

  7. Jan 17, 2019 · 17 January 2019. The Global Code of Conduct for Research in Resource-Poor Settings, which aims to achieve fair partnerships in research, has been adopted by both the European Commission and the European & Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP).