Scientific and legal perspectives on science generated for regulatory activities

Environmental Health Perspectives
Carol J Henry, James W Conrad

Abstract

This article originated from a conference that asked "Should scientific work conducted for purposes of advocacy before regulatory agencies or courts be judged by the same standards as science conducted for other purposes?" In the article, which focuses on the regulatory advocacy context, we argue that it can be and should be. First, we describe a set of standards and practices currently being used to judge the quality of scientific research and testing and explain how these standards and practices assist in judging the quality of research and testing regardless of why the work was conducted. These standards and practices include the federal Information Quality Act, federal Good Laboratory Practice standards, peer review, disclosure of funding sources, and transparency in research policies. The more that scientific information meets these standards and practices, the more likely it is to be of high quality, reliable, reproducible, and credible. We then explore legal issues that may be implicated in any effort to create special rules for science conducted specifically for a regulatory proceeding. Federal administrative law does not provide a basis for treating information in a given proceeding differently depending on its source ...Continue Reading

References

Aug 5, 2005·Environmental Health Perspectives·Frederick S vom Saal, Claude Hughes
Feb 3, 2006·Environmental Health Perspectives·Craig S Barrow, James W Conrad

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Citations

Jan 17, 2008·Environmental Health Perspectives·Leslie I Boden, David Ozonoff
Dec 18, 2010·Environmental Health Perspectives·James W Conrad, Richard A Becker
Feb 22, 2012·Environmental Health Perspectives·Lynn S McCartyEllen M Mihaich
Dec 3, 2011·Environmental Health Perspectives·Patrice SuttonLisa A Bero
Dec 12, 2012·Environmental Health Perspectives·Randall LutterAllan Felsot

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