Programme: The Integrity of Science


Third announcement – including programme and abstracts

 

The integrity of science
A conference about the conflict between public policy and independent science, in honour of Dr. Árpád Pusztai (1930 – 2021)

Edinburgh (UK), 26 – 27 May 2023
open to both on site and online participation

 

Followed by the Annual General Meeting of ENSSER, 28 May 2023

Organised by
European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility (ENSSER)
Mariolopoulos Kanaginis Foundation for the Environmental Sciences
Critical Scientists Switzerland (CSS)
Association des Amis de la Génération Thunberg

Funded by
Triodos Foundation
Mariolopoulos Kanaginis Foundation for the Environmental Sciences
Critical Scientists Switzerland (CSS)
European Network of Scientists for Social and Environmental Responsibility (ENSSER)

 

Independent scientific research for the benefit of people and the planet is suppressed on a larger scale and in more ways than most people are aware of. Commercial interests as well as governments and regulatory agencies generally determine what we read and hear about in the media as scientific findings. Behind the scenes, however, much excellent research is being kept away from public attention by a multitude of means, including (but not limited to) intimidation and harassment of scientists. As a result, there is a growing gulf between public policy and independent science. The integrity of science is at stake. The conference addresses this alarming subject by highlighting one case and analysing many others.

The conference will be in two parts:
Day one (26 May 2023) will honour Dr Árpád Pusztai (who passed away in 2021) and will recall his work and discuss the controversies of his later findings.
Day two (27 May 2023) will probe the continuing conflicts between public policy and critical science, with the purpose of improving public understanding and use of science.

 

PROGRAMME

 

Day 1: A memorial to Dr. Árpád Pusztai

Friday, 26 May 2023, 15:00 – 22:00 GMT

In 1998, Dr. Árpád Pusztai, a world expert on plant lectins, sparked a public debate on the safety of genetically modified (GM) food by speaking on the British TV programme World in Action about the health damage he found in rats fed GM potatoes containing lectins in preliminary tests. As a result of this brief TV interview, he was suspended from his job at the Rowett Research Institute in Aberdeen, Scotland.

His research had been commissioned by the Agriculture, Environment and Fisheries Department of the Scottish Office (the precursor of the present Scottish government). The sharp and prolonged criticism from scientific circles which followed the events, has never been substantiated by tenable scientific arguments. Indeed, his findings have been supported by other independent research that also casts doubt on the safety of some GM food.

Pusztai’s standing as a biochemist and specialist on animal feed was recognised and beyond doubt before these events.

This memorial will describe this episode. We hope we can lay the controversies to rest.

 

PROGRAMME
(Note: Abstracts of the lectures can be found here)

14:30
Registration + tea / coffee

15:30
Opening
Prof. P. Nicolopoulou-Stamati, Medical School of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece, Chair of ENSSER and Secretary of the Board of Mariolopoulos Kanaginis Foundation for the Environmental Sciences

Chair of the day
Dr. Ulrich Loening, Centre for Human Ecology, University of Edinburgh, Scotland

15:45
Difficult days in the Pathology Department: Exciting collaboration with A. Pusztai
Dr. Stanley Ewen, Histopathology Dept., University of Aberdeen, Scotland

16:30
My association with Dr. Árpád Pusztai – an honest scientist
Emeritus Prof. Vyvyan Howard, Professor of Bioimaging, Biomedical Sciences Institute, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland

17:15
Árpád Pusztai – Laureate of the German Whistleblower Prize
Dr. Angelika Hilbeck, Institute of Integrative Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland

18:00
Dinner break

20:00
Reflections on the Pusztai affair
Andrew Rowell, author

20:45
Dr. Árpád Pusztai, the private person
Dr. Susan Bardócz, Professor of Human Nutrition, University of Debrecen, Hungary

21:30
Outlook on day 2 of the conference
Dr. Ulrich Loening, Centre for Human Ecology, University of Edinburgh, Scotland

21:45
Closing
Prof. P. Nicolopoulou-Stamati, Medical School of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece, Chair of ENSSER and Secretary of the Board of Mariolopoulos Kanaginis Foundation for the Environmental Sciences

22:00
End

 

Day 2: Conference “The Integrity of Science”

Saturday, 27 May 2023, 10:00 – 17:00 GMT

 

Pusztai’s story is not unique. Fundamental scientific research is often suppressed in areas where human or environmental health or biodiversity are shown or suspected to be at risk, and even when a new finding is merely unconventional.

In day two, the corruptive influence of entrenched or commercial interests on science in the last decades will be described and analysed, with references to many similar cases (tobacco, asbestos, pesticides, electromagnetic radiation, PFAS, climate change, COVID19, etc.). The list of lessons not learned from early scientific warnings[1] still grows. The grave consequences of this corruption of science for the future of humanity and our planet will be the focus of the conference.

We hope that this conference will inspire fuller appreciation of the values of science, beyond the community of scientists, especially including young scientists.

 

PROGRAMME
(Note: Abstracts of the lectures can be found here)

9:30
Door open + coffee / tea

10:15
Opening by chair of the day
Diederick Sprangers MSc, Scientific Coordinator of ENSSER

10:20
Basic processes and values in science
What is good science? When and how does it fail?

Panel chair: Dr. Brian Wynne, Professor of Science Studies, Lancaster University, England

  • Science as a public good: open science and scientific integrity
    Prof. Geoffrey Boulton, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
  • On Technology, Ignorance and Responsibility
    Christine von Weizsäcker, Advisory Board of the Federation of German Scientists and Scientific Committee of the German Society on Human Ecology
  • The decline of theorization: a threat to the integrity of science
    Dr. Marie Chollat-Namy, République des Savoirs, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France, and Vice President of the Association des Amis de la Génération Thunberg
  • A damaging hidden divide in our scientific endeavour – The solution requires a shift towards a “con vivo” science
    Dr. Ulrich Loening, Centre for Human Ecology, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
  • Panel discussion

12:05
Lunch break

13:05
Scientific questions, findings and public policies
Documenting denial, corruption, harassment and intimidation and links to public and corporate policies

Panel chair: Christine von Weizsäcker, Advisory Board of the Federation of German Scientists and Scientific Committee of the German Society on Human Ecology

  • Science Suspended at the Turn of Century: Collision of a Political Imperative against Evidence and Critical Enquiry
    Dr. Ignacio Chapela, Professor, Dept. of Environmental Science, University of California Berkeley, USA
  • Geography of Asymmetries and Chemical Colonialism – A Brazilian Woman Geographer in Exile
    Prof. Larissa Bombardi, Department of Geography, University of São Paulo, Brazil (on leave) and Visiting Researcher at CESSMA (Centre d’études en sciences sociales sur les mondes africains, américains et asiatiques), Programme PAUSE, Université de Paris, France
  • Towards a Taxonomy of Ways in Which Current Science Lacks Integrity
    Dr. Irina Passos Natário de Castro, University of Coimbra, Portugal and
    Dr. Brian Wynne, Professor of Science Studies, Lancaster University, England
  • Panel discussion

14:25
Tea / coffee

14:50
Promises, risks and regulation
Possible ways forward

Panel chair: Dr. Angelika Hilbeck, Institute of Integrative Biology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zurich, Switzerland

  • Inappropriate use of regulatory risk assessment to demonstrate ‘safety’ – unstated, unrealistic assumptions
    Emeritus Prof. Vyvyan Howard, Professor of Bioimaging, Biomedical Sciences Institute, University of Ulster, Northern Ireland
  • Deceptive science – Manipulated methods and trimmed information in biosafety of GM crops. Reflections on two cases from Latin America
    Dr. Georgina Catacora – Vargas, Bolivian Catholic University San Pablo, La Paz, Bolivia
  • Panel discussion

15:55
Final discussion
Diederick Sprangers MSc, Scientific Coordinator of ENSSER

16:25
Closing
Prof. P. Nicolopoulou-Stamati, Medical School of National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece, Chair of ENSSER and Secretary of the Board of Mariolopoulos Kanaginis Foundation for the Environmental Sciences

17:00
End

 

 

Venue

Royal Society of Edinburgh
22 – 26 George Street
Edinburgh EH2 2PQ
Scotland

Please note: we offer tea and coffee, but not meals. For the dinner break on Friday and the lunch break on Saturday, many restaurants can be found in the immediate vicinity of the Royal Society.

Recording

The entire conference (lectures and discussion sessions, both on site and online) will be recorded and published.

Registration fees

Both on site and online participation is possible.
Voluntary fees, both for online and on site participation: Please consider making a donation towards covering the considerable costs of this conference, e.g.:
€ 5 (reduced), € 30 (regular), € 60 (solidary), or any amount with which you wish to support us;
payable to our bank account with reference “conference fee” or to our paypal account (scroll down and click on the button “spenden”).

Registration

For online registration, please register here: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_LeAEaWcoT3aMACAIcAxF_g

For on site registration, please register here:
https://ensser.org/events/events_2023/registration-integrity-of-science/

Your registration will be confirmed.

Accommodation

The conference takes place in Whitsunday weekend, so it is advisable to book accommodation as soon as possible.

 

[1]     European Environment Agency, “Late Lessons from Early Warnings”, Vols. I and II, Copenhagen, 2001 and 2013, https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/environmental_issue_report_2001_22 and https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/late-lessons-2

Attachments