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Item Oral History and Human Subject Research: A Roundtable and Community Conversation on the Current State of Risks, Regulations, and Ethics Reviews(2024-11-02) Bravent, Jay-Marie; Boyd, Douglas A.; Dilger, Kirsten; Pieczko, Brandon T.; Terry, KopanaThe COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the interconnections between public health research and oral history. The 2022 Nelson Memo and 2018 EU GDPR have raised awareness about research data, public access, retention, and transparency. As research protocols utilizing interview procedures have increased, so too have the risks associated with interviewees speaking publicly about political and social issues. Threats and targeting of ethnic groups, undocumented immigrants, libraries, and the LGBTQA+ community grow, along with worries about social media shaming or job loss for interviewees. AI. Deep fakes. Identity theft. As the importance of oral history in this shifting research context and public spotlight continues to grow, projects must increasingly adhere to data privacy protections, retention guidelines, transparency regulations, and ethics review. Social science and humanities research protocols must meet new criteria from peer-reviewed journals, Institutional Review Boards, institutional research and legal office reviews, federal agencies, and funding organizations. How can oral history researchers and practitioners adapt and support each other? How should interviewers prepare, train, and anticipate new levels of peer review and public scrutiny? How do we navigate the different legal and institutional interpretations of “exclusion” and “exemption”? All while preserving academic freedom and open repository access to oral history interviews? Join us for a discussion of the current state (and future) of oral history within the frameworks of human subject research review, data requirements, government regulations, cultural literacy guidelines, and best practices for ensuring protections for interviewees.Item Report and recommendations: Research involving prisoners -- Part I(1976) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart I of this report contains the recommendations as well as the deliberations and conclusions of the Commission and a summary of background materials.Item Report and recommendations: Research involving prisoners -- Part II(1976) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchGeneral history, nature, and extent of research involving prisoners in the United States is discussed in Part II.Item Report and recommendations: Research involving prisoners -- Part III(1976) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart III of this report contains the activities of the Commission including site visits and public hearings.Item Report and recommendations: Research involving prisoners -- Part IV(1976) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart IV of this report contains philosophical reports describing various perspectives on prison research as well as alternatives and foreign practices.Item Report and recommendations: Research involving prisoners -- Preface(1976) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchThe Preface of this report contains introductory letters as well as a synopsis of the recommendations the Commission compiled with regard to prisoner research.Item Report and recommendations: research on the fetus -- Part I(1975) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart I of this report contains the official mandate. The nature and purpose of research involving the fetus are summarized in Part II. The alternative means for achieving the purposes of fetal research are summarized in Part III. Parts IV and V discuss the legal and ethical issues. Part VI contains views expressed at public hearings. Part VII explores fetal viability and death. Part VIII covers the report deliberations and conclusions. Part IX details the recommendations.Item Report and recommendations: research on the fetus -- Part II(1975) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart I of this report contains the official mandate. The nature and purpose of research involving the fetus are summarized in Part II. The alternative means for achieving the purposes of fetal research are summarized in Part III. Parts IV and V discuss the legal and ethical issues. Part VI contains views expressed at public hearings. Part VII explores fetal viability and death. Part VIII covers the report deliberations and conclusions. Part IX details the recommendations.Item Report and recommendations: research on the fetus -- Part III(1975) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart I of this report contains the official mandate. The nature and purpose of research involving the fetus are summarized in Part II. The alternative means for achieving the purposes of fetal research are summarized in Part III. Parts IV and V discuss the legal and ethical issues. Part VI contains views expressed at public hearings. Part VII explores fetal viability and death. Part VIII covers the report deliberations and conclusions. Part IX details the recommendations.Item Report and recommendations: research on the fetus -- Part IV(1975) United States. National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral ResearchPart I of this report contains the official mandate. The nature and purpose of research involving the fetus are summarized in Part II. The alternative means for achieving the purposes of fetal research are summarized in Part III. Parts IV and V discuss the legal and ethical issues. Part VI contains views expressed at public hearings. Part VII explores fetal viability and death. Part VIII covers the report deliberations and conclusions. Part IX details the recommendations.