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An open letter protesting journal retraction of Seralini study and pledging to boycott publishing giant Elsevier attracted 1 175 signatures in less than a week Dr Mae-Wan Ho and Prof Peter Saunders
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Twenty-eight scientists from six countries launched the [1] Open Letter on Retraction and Pledge to Boycott Elsevier (SiS 61) at 7:00 pm GMT 4 December 2013, inviting both scientists and non-scientists to sign on. The letter condemns the gratuitous unilateral retraction of a peer-reviewed paper published in the Elsevier journal Food and Chemical Toxicology (FCT) a year ago; and those who sign on pledge to boycott the publisher unless and until the retraction is reversed. In less than a week, it attracted more than 1 175 signatures: 419 scientists and 756 non-scientists from 54 countries around the world, among them, distinguished award winning researchers and celebrities (see Box 1 for what some signatories say).
The paper - retracted by the journal editor despite robust protest from the scientists who did the research - reported excess premature deaths, tumours including cancers, and illnesses of liver and kidney in rats fed GM maize and/or exposed to Roundup herbicide [2] (Retracting Séralini Study Violates Science and Ethics, SiS 61). The project, led by Gilles-Eric Séralini at Caen University in France, is the most in-depth, long term toxicological study on GMOs and Roundup herbicide to-date. It confirmed, corroborated, and extended previous research findings as well as the experiences of farmers in the field (see [3]Ban GMOs Now, ISIS Report).
But GM proponents orchestrated a worldwide campaign to discredit the study, including the appointment of ex-Monsanto employee Richard Goodman to a newly created post of associate editor for biotechnology at FCT, which eventually led to the retraction. The editor has admitted openly that the paper does not qualify for retraction according to the internationally accepted ethical code laid down by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and accepted by FCT. The worst he can say is that the results are “inconclusive”.
In contrast, as pointed out by Séralini and colleagues [4], a study by Monsanto published in the same journal claiming to find no biological effect different from controls, but containing a gross error in the controls used – i.e., a heterogeneous collection of ‘historical controls’ that are non-isogenic and not in the same experiment - was never even considered for retraction. Seralini’s study fed the same GM maize to the same strain of rats and analysed the same number – 10 - as Monsanto’s. The journal and its publisher are blatantly applying a double standard.
The retraction of the Séralini study is not an isolated incident; another published paper reporting potential harm from other GMOs was withdrawn from the same journal shortly before, though it was accepted by a different journal almost immediately [2]. Nor is Elsevier the only publisher to censor science on behalf of industry. There were other recent attempts at retracting papers from journals, including that written by one of us, “The New Genetics and Naturalversus Artificial Genetic Modification” [5] - making the case that artificial genetic modification is inherently hazardous because it inevitably interferes with the natural process carried out by the organisms themselves, which is essential for survival. The paper was accepted for publication after a protracted review by 6 referees, only to be withdrawn, most likely by the publisher, before it could appear in the journal. We believe the journal editor stood up to the publisher and reinstated the paper.
Retracting published peer-reviewed papers for no other reason than that their findings might be inconvenient for industry erases from public record scientific evidence that could be crucial for safeguarding public health and well-being. It is an unprecedented censorship of research, information and knowledge that threatens science itself, let alone science and democracy or science for the public good.
Elsevier already has a suspect record, having put out 6 fake medical journals sponsored by unnamed pharmaceutical companies, and also facing a boycott for its sharp business practices (see [2]). In November 2013, the publisher began sending thousands of requests to Academia.edu to take down papers published in its journals [6]. Academia.edu, a five-year-old site with nearly 6 million academics signed up, was created to enable researchers to share their scientific papers freely.
The Séralini retraction exposes the extent to which science has become monopolized and distorted to serve corporate interests. It is particularly invidious, as so many policies and decisions that affect our everyday life and our prospect for survival depend on impartial, reliable, and disinterested scientific knowledge that we can trust. It highlights the importance of liberating science, of opening it up for free exchange of ideas, debate and discussion.
The open access movement for scientific publishing, which started in the 1990s, was primarily driven by the high costs of journals and journal subscriptions at a time when online publishing and the internet have enabled scientists to make their work available to one another and to the public without going through the conventional printed journals [7]. instigators certainly did not foresee how crucial open access has become.
Academia.edu is committed to [6] “enabling the transition to a world where there is open access to academic literature.” It has recently received $11.1 million funding to expand.
Randy Schekman, co-winner of 2013 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, said his lab would no longer send research papers to “luxury” journals likeNature, Cell and Science [8] because they are distorting the scientific process and represent a “tyranny” that must be broken.
Help liberate science. Start by signing onto our Open Letter here: http://www.i-sis.org.uk/Open_letter_to_FCT_and_Elsevier.php
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