
This post will be a top sticky post for a day, new stories will appear below this one.
While this issue was covered previously on Climate Audit, I thought this needed the exposure that WUWT could afford.
There’s a famous quote from CRU’s Phil Jones to Warwick Hughes that pretty much sums up the entire issue of climate science, saying essentially that the work is above reproach and there’s no reason to allow it to be questioned by providing access to raw data for replication, especially by climate skeptics, even though it was done on public funds:
“We have 25 or so years invested in the work. Why should I make the data available to you, when your aim is to try and find something wrong with it.”
As readers know, a few people have been trying to get access to the poll data from Lewandowsky’s “moon landing hoax” paper (the one where he hid his involvement and the poll was mostly posted on climate alarmist sites, and WUWT wasn’t even asked) and have been stonewalled. This response about data access from Professor Paul Johnson, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Western Australia takes stonewalling to a whole new level, and is a close second to that famous quote from Phil Jones.
Some foreword might be helpful to understand the context as to why this sort of behavior exhibited by Jones, and now Paul Johnson, is broadly damaging to the reputation of science.
The issue with Lewandowsky is unscientific and unethical behavior by creating an advance conclusion (all climate skeptics are conspiracy nutters) followed by attempts to hide his association with the study to people who were polled, selective distribution of the poll, mainly to websites who are advocates of climate action, then outright mocking of the very people who was supposedly studying, then actually writing in his own conclusions to an ethics investigation that was supposed to be done independently.
One cannot imagine a more egregious abuse of the scientific process as we have witnessed with Lewandowsky’s vilification of climate skeptics using the journal Psychological Science as a bully pulpit.
Dr. Judith Curry’s thoughts about Michael Mann’s behavior seem germane here, simply substitute Mann with Lewandowsky:
For the past decade, scientists have come to the defense of Michael Mann, somehow thinking that defending Michael Mann is fighting against the ‘war on science’ and is standing up for academic freedom. Its time to let Michael Mann sink or swim on his own. Michael Mann is having all these problems because he chooses to try to muzzle people that are critical of Mann’s science, critical of Mann’s professional and personal behavior, and critical of Mann’s behavior as revealed in the climategate emails. All this has nothing to do with defending climate science or academic freedom.
Barry Woods advises me of this gobsmacking response from UWA’s Vice Chancellor, Paul Johnson, and provided all the emails from the timeline to me for inspection. It is important to know that Lewandowsky has left UWA where his paper was originally approved, data gathered, written, and published from, and is now at the University of Bristol.
Barry Woods writes:
I wrote to Lewandowsky last September, & eventually got a response via a Bristol Uni press officer referring any concerns to UWA.
Woods also wrote to the journal editor Eric Eich, asking for access to data so that a comment could be sent to the journal:
I wrote to Maybery (UWA) in early March (and a couple of reminders), then received Paul Johnson’s email.
…
One of the lessons of Climategate was that even most scientists agreed on was ‘data transparency’. I can’t believe the VC of University of Western Australia’s response to me. AND that he would put it in writing! Four and a half years on from Climategate, and we still have universities refusing to share data with critics.
Here is the letter from UWA’s vice-chancellor as a screen-cap. The bolding was done by Johnson Woods:
I have pixelated the email address for Mr. Woods (which is private) so that he doesn’t get attacked/spammed, and the other email participants by cc: are not on display due to them being in Mr. Woods contact list, only their names display. Johnson’s email address is also pixelated for the same reason.
I also verified that the email is genuine, by looking at the email headers within it.
And, it appears that by the UWA’s own published policy they are quite open to data sharing:
In the “Code of Conduct for the Responsible Practice of Research”, it becomes clear that Vice Chancellor Paul Johnson’s statement of “It is not the University’s practice to accede to such requests” is a bald faced lie:
Steve McIntyre and others have suggested that some of Lewandowsky’s poll data may have been falsified, and they want to test that assumption. UWA Vice Chancellor Paul Johnson’s response puts him at odds with the 3.4 and 3.8 sections above.
We also have a clear case from UWA’s own records obtained via FOI law that Lewandowsky Ghost-wrote Conclusions of UWA Ethics Investigation into “Hoax”.
So, the “investigation” supposedly done by UWA into the research of Lewandowsky was actually done by Lewandowsky himself.
This episode is turning into quite an ethics quagmire for UWA, I can see why Johnson would purposely violate their own policy by telling Woods that UWA won’t share the data. The data itself must be damning for them to want to protect it this much in violation of their own policy; perhaps with data even showing that some of the responses to the poll that McIntyre wants to examine came from within the University itself, creating another, more culpable conflict of interest and violation of UWA’s own research policy.
When a university administrator decides that “It is not the University’s practice to accede to such requests”, because of the perceived ‘attacks on science’, it seems they believe the work of colleagues rather than check the issues being raised. It is clear Johnson is more trusting of a former colleague vs the ‘anti-science forces of denial’, as climate skeptics are often falsely characterized as.
No matter what you think about climate science, or science in general, I would hope that you would embrace the need for transparency of data as the most important issue of science, because it is within the data where truth lives. Without the verification and replication of science that data access allows, science runs the risk of falling victim to the human emotional condition of opinions, agendas, tribalism, and personal vendettas acted out via the process of noble cause corruption.
I believe that is what we see here and it is a sad day for science when administrators in two universities and a journal editor circle the wagons to protect a science paper that may not only be wrong, but is likely based on an emotional response turned into a vendetta by the principal investigator, Lewandowsky, we all lose.
In cases of public malfeasance, it if often the cover-up which gets more attention for prosecution than the original infraction, and this looks to be the making of just such a situation.





I was personally refused data by the VC as well.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/04/03/a-stunning-revelation-from-a-uwa-vice-chancellor-paul-johnson-over-access-to-lewandowsky-poll-data/
oops – I meant to post that comment at Australian Climate Madness !!
http://australianclimatemadness.com/2014/03/29/uwa-closes-ranks-behind-lew-refuses-access-to-data/
@ur momisugly Patrick.
Gone past the beers…….now onto the burbs (JB)….. 🙂
BTW, don’t forget to set your clocks back tomorrow night.
That ‘extra’ hour of daylight during summer plays havoc with climate change/global warming. /sarc
I get the impression that some postings are being sent her on purpose to distract (long irrelevant etc) Just to note me thinks
You’d think they would be begging someone to look at the data for confirmation that there was no academic malfeasance.
There’s only one inference from their reluctance…
An the straw man of threats of legal action as the cause of the retraction is out again…they only need to prove they didn’t lie and any libel will go away.
But unless MSM start getting involved this will all be forgotten next week…
“But unless MSM start getting involved this will all be forgotten next week…”
I hope everyone reading here realizes by now that the MSM are paid shills for the other side.
Barry…..I couldn’t help but think that the post code for Bristol in your post summed up the feeling about Lew exactly: BS1 4QA (BS numero uno for Q and A)
I listened to a snippet of one of the videos that Barry Woods embedded in his post of April 3, 2014 at 3:26 pm. Lewandowsky immediately struck me as an angry, even hateful, fellow during the interview. If that’s the case, then I’m sure he’s downright apoplectic having had his paper retracted due to the outcry coming from the skeptic community.
But, to quote Mosher: “Free the data. Free the code. Data wants to be free!”
I recently wanted to comment on a paper about population trends for amphibians. The authors sent me the data in a few days. Questions arose and they answered them. Conversely, I have recently had a lengthy (20 emails) correspondence with someone who is auditing my climate sensitivity paper. He replicated my calculations and got the same result (though he does not agree with all my assumptions). This is how science works.
Hmmm…fudging and/or hiding data sounds vaguely familiar:
Very important new statement from Frontiers the publisher
http://www.frontiersin.org/blog/Retraction_of_Recursive_Fury_A_Statement/812
Did Frontiers just threw UWA & the authors under a bus?
this sounds harsh?
“One of Frontiers’ founding principles is that of authors’ rights. We take this opportunity to reassure our editors, authors and supporters that Frontiers will continue to publish – and stand by – valid research.”
http://www.frontiersin.org/blog/Retraction_of_Recursive_Fury_A_Statement/812
Retraction of Recursive Fury: A Statement
(Lausanne, Switzerland) – There has been a series of media reports concerning the recent retraction of the paper Recursive Fury: Conspiracist ideation in the blogosphere in response to research on conspiracist ideation, originally published on 18 March 2013 in Frontiers in Psychology. Until now, our policy has been to handle this matter with discretion out of consideration for all those concerned. But given the extent of the media coverage – largely based on misunderstanding – Frontiers would now like to better clarify the context behind the retraction.
As we published in our retraction statement, a small number of complaints were received during the weeks following publication. Some of those complaints were well argued and cogent and, as a responsible publisher, our policy is to take such issues seriously. Frontiers conducted a careful and objective investigation of these complaints. Frontiers did not “cave in to threats”; in fact, Frontiers received no threats. The many months between publication and retraction should highlight the thoroughness and seriousness of the entire process.
As a result of its investigation, which was carried out in respect of academic, ethical and legal factors, Frontiers came to the conclusion that it could not continue to carry the paper, which does not sufficiently protect the rights of the studied subjects. Specifically, the article categorizes the behaviour of identifiable individuals within the context of psychopathological characteristics. Frontiers informed the authors of the conclusions of our investigation and worked with the authors in good faith, providing them with the opportunity of submitting a new paper for peer review that would address the issues identified and that could be published simultaneously with the retraction notice.
The authors agreed and subsequently proposed a new paper that was substantially similar to the original paper and, crucially, did not deal adequately with the issues raised by Frontiers.
We remind the community that the retracted paper does not claim to be about climate science, but about psychology. The actions taken by Frontiers sought to ensure the right balance of respect for the rights of all.
One of Frontiers’ founding principles is that of authors’ rights. We take this opportunity to reassure our editors, authors and supporters that Frontiers will continue to publish – and stand by – valid research. But we also must uphold the rights and privacy of the subjects included in a study or paper.
Frontiers is happy to speak to anyone who wishes to have an objective and informed conversation about this. In such a case, please contact the Editorial Office at editorial.office@frontiersin.org.
Costanza Zucca, Editorial Director
Fred Fenter, Executive Editor
@Barry Woods – Re: “Did Frontiers just threw UWA & the authors under a bus?”
it sounds more like they yelled “bus”, but Lew and UWA ignored their warning.
“it is within the data where truth lives”
THAT is a nice quote !!!
geoffchambers says:
April 3, 2014 at 12:29 pm
Another thing the data would show is that none of the responses came from SkepticalScience, thus proving the truth of the point Barry Woods and I have been making since September 2012, six months before the publication of the paper, that the claim made in the paper that the survey was linked at SkepticalScience is false. It will also show how many responses came from Cook’s personal tweet.
You may be right. Unless the data is made available and shows the contrary we have all reason to believe it is the case.
Why would somebody want to hide it?
Unfortunately in post-modern “science” “data” is no longer data but a tool for the high priests who know the conclusions and only use “data” to support it.
Without transparency – data sharing and clear description of methodology to allow for reproducibility of experiments – science is just about that: religion.
It doesn’t surprise me that most people who believe the moon landing was a hoax would believe global warming is a scam, not based on science obviously since if you understood science well enough you’d recognize the moon landing hoax arguments are based on bad science. But if you like to put down people or push them off their high horse, and have that general “you think you’re so smart” attitude towards scientists you probably will jump on the bandwagon of anything putting down things supposedly based on science. So if you took a survey that first asked “Do you believe the moon landing was a hoax?” If the answer is no, survey over. If you answer yes, then you ask “Do you believe global warming is a scam?”. You will get more than 50% yes responses from that, so you could conclude, based on the data you have, most people who believe global warming is a scam also believe the moon landing was a hoax.
I think you need to challenge your assumptions.
When Johnson says, “It is not the University’s request to accede to such requests”, you may be assuming you understand what he means by “such requests”.
What does it mean, “such requests”?
A clue might be in the University’s policy on Data Access and Sharing. It seems to detail the sharing of data among colleagues and between researchers.
So, who is this person making a data sharing request? Is he a colleague? Is he a researcher? Does he have any relevant academic qualifications? Does he have any academic publishing record in the the relevant field? Does he have a history of good faith participation in the relevant academic debate?
Reading between the lines, I’d say we can see what Johnson thinks the answers are to all these questions.
If Lewandowsky’s results were supported by genuinely-sourced and properly processed data, it would be far easier and more persuasive to release all data as soon as OR BEFORE any questions are asked.
The same goes for Mann, of course.
The cause of those promoting (C)AGW would be so much stronger if they were open and honest in their activities. The fact that the most important two planks of their argument
1) Recent warming is unprecedented
2) Nearly all scientists agree that humanity is to blame
rest on unscientific studies (for this is what they are unrepeatable or improper) beggars belief. It’s this that should raise the suspicions of absolutely everybody, from the greatest intellects to the most average of Joes. If someone’s strongest arguments can’t be defended even by themselves, they’re a write-off.
OK in my example you could only conclude that most people who believe the moon landing was a hoax believe global warming is a scam. Not the same as the reverse being true but lets face it, not everyone who is a skeptic of global warming is that way because they look at data, some are just pro-conspiracy or anti-science and a properly worded survey could easily connect the moon-hoax and global warming denier view points together.
mem, well done. Dr Jennings is a skeptic, and the only minister with a Sc.Deg. Well Ph.D., I think I will do the same with my MP. What a great move.
I love ‘Hide the decline video. Is that still running? I thought it was removed by Mann.
Keith, your assertions do not bear up. Researchers base their research on whatever data they have to hand. If the data is sparse, then the research is based on sparse data.
The best way to argue your point would be to gather an alternative data set, hopefully show that your data is better quality, and present your results.
But first, what is your thesis?
As they say, never ask a question if you don’t know the answer – so what do you hope to prove?
Do you want to contend that those people who do not accept the overwhelming scientific consensus on the causes, effects and reality of human-caused climate change are otherwise entirely rational beings?
Oh, and a good start would be to stop talking about “CAGW”, whatever that is, because that isn’t a scientific issue and immediately sidelines you as somebody not approaching the science seriously.
Craig Thomas at 8:39 pm
If researchers have sparse data they can only draw sparse conclusions. In LOG 12 for example L. et al draw conclusions about the global population from highly biased, limited samples and poor quality questionnaires (and in that case the sparse data is of their own making).
L. makes a habit of this. You should read through his work and ask yourself “How did he make the inference from the data he had to the grand statements he concludes with?”
But I don’t think L.’s interested in the science, that’s why he recommended a journalism student to review Fury.
Steve says:
April 4, 2014 at 1:48 pm
It doesn’t surprise me that most people who believe the moon landing was a hoax would believe global warming is a scam, not based on science obviously since if you understood science well enough you’d recognize the moon landing hoax arguments are based on bad science.
Steve that “moon landing hoax arguments are based on bad science” I would agree with you on that.
However the rest is missing a logical argument.
Global warming – especially the catastrophic spin-off theories – is bad science and you fail to recognise it.
What does the data tell us? This is how skeptics think. First look at the data, then interpret it logically.
The data tells us that the moon landing is there – we can see the data:
http://www.space.com/12796-photos-apollo-moon-landing-sites-lro.html
And also we see the 17 years of no warming. Just look at the data first:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/03/04/no-global-warming-for-17-years-6-months/
Steve says:
April 4, 2014 at 5:35 pm
OK in my example you could only conclude that most people who believe the moon landing was a hoax believe global warming is a scam. Not the same as the reverse being true but lets face it, not everyone who is a skeptic of global warming is that way because they look at data, some are just pro-conspiracy or anti-science and a properly worded survey could easily connect the moon-hoax and global warming denier view points together.
The anti-science argument is another fake fake argument. If one digs deeper one finds that many try to stretch science to cover for bad-science and put any argument against climate science as “anti-science”.
With arguments like: one should not fly an aeroplane as they are built on models and so on, failing to recognise the specific critique to BAD models. Who would fly an aeroplane based on models that reflect reality so badly as climate models?
Lets face it, many who believe in global warming do believe in big-oil, fossil fuel financed skeptics conspiracy theories and do not want to look at the science based on their conspiracy ideation views.