4.2 Article

The institutional workers of biomedical science: Legitimizing academic entrepreneurship and obscuring conflicts of interest

Journal

SCIENCE AND PUBLIC POLICY
Volume 45, Issue 3, Pages 404-415

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/scipol/scx075

Keywords

institutional work; academic entrepreneurship; conflict of interest; entrepreneurial science

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [DRA 198140, TGF 53911, MOP 81195]

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Given growing initiatives incentivizing academic researchers to engage in 'entrepreneurial' activities, this article examines how these academic entrepreneurs claim value in their entrepreneurial engagements, and navigate concerns related to conflicts of interest. Using data from qualitative interviews with twenty-four academic entrepreneurs in Canada, we show how these scientists value entrepreneurial activities for providing financial and intellectual resources to academic science, as well as for their potential to create impact through translation. Simultaneously, these scientists claimed to maintain academic norms of disinterested science and avoid conflicts of interest. Using theories of institutional work, we demonstrate how entrepreneurial scientists engage in processes of institutional change-through-maintenance, drawing on the maintenance of academic norms as institutional resources to legitimize entrepreneurial activities. As entrepreneurial scientists work to legitimize new zones of academic scientific practice, there is a need to carefully regulate and scrutinize these activities so that their potential harms do not become obscured.

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