Hi Gary and all, this one's an interesting one.  Your position is one I have a 
lot of sympathy for - it's generous and gives credit where it's due.  What 
makes this tricky is that it also gives responsibility that somebody might not 
want to accept.  I know it's unlikely and not that common but there may be 
instances where somebody would prefer not to have their name on a paper where 
they've done enough work to warrant authorship.  If my name showed up on a 
paper without me ever being aware that it had been submitted I would be a 
little bothered.  If I read the paper and didn't agree with the interpretation 
I would be very unhappy.  That said, the idea of not giving credit to somebody 
who deserves it just seems wrong.  This is a rock and a hard place. Best, Jeff 
Houlahan

________________________________
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news 
<[email protected]> on behalf of Gary Grossman <[email protected]>
Sent: August 20, 2016 12:04 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Query on authorship

Querido Jorge, this is a murky area of co-authorship except for one point. 
Coauthorship is *earned* and should not be taken away because of some other 
circumstance outside of the project responsibilities. Given that the second 
student completed the work while they were at your institution, the simple 
solution, given that they did indeed earn coauthorship, is to put them on the 
paper with your institutional address. If you're worried about someone 
contacting them then just asterisk their name and in the footnote put "current 
address unknown". !Eso!  g2

On Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 3:24 PM, Jorge A. Santiago-Blay 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Query on authorship

Dear Colleagues:

I am writing a small paper resulting from research done with two undergraduates 
many years ago (and, later on, involving several other colleagues using 
cutting-edge technology). As the results became obvious, both of the students 
agreed (orally, in person) with me that we should get the research published. 
As far as I remember, there was no email or letter documenting that and, there 
was no manuscript, only the data and the methods we were using.

The problem: I have located one of the former students (now a researcher at a 
major research institution), who is excited about getting the research 
published, but not the second student.

Question: How to handle the contribution (including authorship) of the other 
person? Here are some options I see.

a. Omit the name of the person that has not been located and indicate that 
another person was involved in the data collection but we were hot able to 
locate him/her to get his/her approval to use his/her name as an author.  Under 
these circumstances, would it be OK to name the person in the Acknowledgments? 
Lately, I am asking permission to do that because sometimes some people prefer 
to remain anonymous.

b. Include the name of the person I cannot locate as an author, an act of 
fairness and good faith on my part. If the person does not like the idea (and 
the paper is published) retract the name of the person in an erratum, later on, 
and assume responsibility for my error. A kind colleague did that to me once 
and, subsequently, it has resulted a long standing collaboration (and 
co-authorship in many papers, with my knowledge) :)

c. Nor use the data garnered by the person I cannot locate. Although I am 
pretty sure I am authorized by the institution to use the data, as a general 
personal; preference, I like to ask permission.

If you have something constructive to comment, kindly direct your comments to 
me, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> ,

Apologies for potential duplicate emails.

Sincerely,

Jorge

Jorge A. Santiago-Blay, PhD
blaypublishers.com<http://blaypublishers.com>


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--
Gary D. Grossman, PhD
Fellow, American Fisheries Soc.

Professor of Animal Ecology
Warnell School of Forestry & Natural Resources
University of Georgia
Athens, GA, USA 30602

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