Repost/Reblog;
5 lessons to learn from plagiarism at the Senate
by Analiza
Perez-Amurao
A lessons from the Philippine Senate to avoid plagiarism.
Lesson 1:
Cite your source.
The most
fundamental rule when using someone else's ideas in your own paper or speech –
whether through a direct quote, a paraphrase or a summary – is to always cite
the source. This includes not only academic research, but also both old and
recent readings, which have eventually become part of your stock knowledge. At
the end of the day, every writer should realize that she or he still owes these
ideas to the source.
Applying
this rule would have prevented the lifting of excerpts from the blog of Sarah
Pope who said, "I don't like the fact that my blog was used without
my permission against the education of the women of the Philippines and their
reproductive rights. That is the issue and it was indeed plagiarism"
Lesson 2:
There is such a thing as a "source in another source."
Sotto's
use of Sarah Pope's blog entry would have been all right had he and his staff
understood what is known in academic circles as citing a "source in
another source." Sotto or his aides should have said something like,
“According to Natasha Campbell-McBride who is quoted in Ms. Pope’s blog…”
Pope has good reason to claim that the Senator and his staff used her
paraphrase of Campbell-McBride’s ideas without acknowledging Pope’s authorship. Pope
said: "If his staff did it, he (Sotto) condoned it. He is responsible for
your actions. My blog was quoted, not Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride. I put her
work in my own words and you copied my words."
Lesson 3:
Acknowledging a source belatedly does not correct the error.
Recognizing
the source belatedly has no place once plagiarism has been committed. An
attribution to the source, which is a plain after-thought, as what happened,
becomes moot and academic. This is what Sotto's chief of staff Atty. Hector
Villacorta tried to do when he wrote on the comments section of Pope’s blog
after the plagiarism was exposed: “If you wish that you also be credited with
the contents of this book, let this be your affirmation. I can do it and by
this message, I am doing it. Hope this satisfies you.”
But
recognizing the author in a discourse different from the form where plagiarism
was committed just does not rectify the error. It only shows deeper ignorance
of the accepted practice. It can, in fact, be punishable by law.
As
discussed in Plagiarism and the Law, “Plagiarism covers a spectrum from
word for word textual copying, through changing some words but retaining the
basic structure, through to copying ideas and arguments. The common thread is
that the copying is dishonest because it is unacknowledged.”
In
discussing the right of attribution, Ronald Standler
cited Article 6 of the Berne Convention saying, “the true author has the right
to have his/her name on the work.” This principle is also shared by the UK Intellectual Property (IP) rights government
body which says that respect for copyright “…also gives moral rights [for the
true author] to be identified as the creator of certain kinds of material, and
to object to distortion or mutilation of it.”
New Directions in Copyright Law emphasizes that
“Plagiarism and copyright are different aspects of the same core issue:
respecting and appropriately acknowledging the intellectual property of an
individual or group of individuals responsible for the creation of original
work.” Hence, seen from any of the two perspectives, copyright- or
plagiarism-wise, something was not done right.
Lesson 4:
Plagiarism is fraudulent.
There is
no such a thing as unintentional plagiarism or "oversight" as claimed
by Villacorta. While some sources claim that plagiarism on its own may not be
considered illegal, it can be considered one if "…it offends against the
law of misrepresentation,” as argued in New Directions in Copyright Law.
Apart
from issues concerning intellectual property rights, Dr. Eleanour Snow of the University of South Florida said the plagiarist
can be committing “fraudulence [that] is closely related to forgery and piracy
– practices generally in violation of copyright laws.”
Earlier,
Villacorta owned up to the "oversight" and said Sotto was not
involved in plagiarizing Pope’s work.
Lesson 5:
A plagiarist has little reason to complain.
A
plagiarist has no right to state a grievance because "...it is unwise for
a plagiarist to complain about how he/she was treated," according to
Checkforplagiarism.net, one of the leading online management tools used by
universities to detect and avoid plagiarism.
It was
odd for Villacorta to request Pope to "take their side in the discussions
on the RH bill and not 'deflect the debate toward this issue of plagiarism. It
is so out of sync in this great debate.'"
What can
be learned from Sotto's situation is that legislators (and their staff) – who
regularly research vast amounts of information, and whose products, namely,
legislative bills, have far-reaching consequences on citizens – must strictly
observe rules on intellectual property rights.
Source: RAPPLER
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