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Research Security at the National Science Foundation

Office of the Chief of Research Security Strategy and Policy

Research security is a critical matter. It is important that the research community, government agencies and our international partners have frequent dialogue to share perspectives and help shape our research security policies and programs. Collaboration is critical to a vibrant science and engineering community, which includes domestic and international collaboration.

Sethuraman Panchanathan
Director, National Science Foundation

Research security at NSF: Why does it matter?

Securing the nation's research enterprise is part of the mission of the U.S. National Science Foundation and is essential to the national defense. NSF works closely on this effort with its funding agency counterparts and with the law enforcement and intelligence communities — consistently emphasizing the importance of balancing research security with international collaboration in science and engineering.

NSF has dedicated considerable effort and resources to working with the research community and its other partners to:

  • Equip researchers with the information and tools necessary to ensure that their work is protected.
  • Clarify security issues and mitigate risks.
  • Foster transparency, disclosure and other practices that reflect the values of research integrity.

NSF's effort has led to ongoing initiatives aimed at clarifying proposal preparation and award administration requirements, as well as the issuance of new policies and directives in the proposal and award process.


If you are a staff member from a Sponsored Research Office (SRO) or a member of a federal agency with a research security-related concern, and you would like input from the OCRSSP, please contact researchsecurity@nsf.gov

Members of the media should contact media@nsf.gov. Everyone is encouraged to report allegations of waste, fraud, or abuse — including possible violations of laws, rules or regulations — to the NSF Office of Inspector General Hotline.

The responsibility of securing the nation’s research falls to everyone in the research community, both at home and abroad.

NSF

NSF is committed to safeguarding the integrity and security of science while also keeping fundamental research open and collaborative. The agency seeks to address an age of new threats and challenges through close work with partners in academia, law enforcement, intelligence and other federal agencies. By fostering transparency, disclosure and other practices that reflect the values of research integrity, NSF is helping to lead the way in ensuring taxpayer-funded research remains secure.

NSF-supported organizations

Federally funded organizations also have a role as stewards of that research — including training the next generation of researchers. Organizations receiving federal funding should demonstrate robust leadership and oversight; establish and administer policies to promote transparency and guard against conflicts of interest and commitment; provide training and information on research security; ensure effective mechanisms for compliance with organizational policies; and implement processes to assess and manage potential risks associated with collaborations and data.

Everyone

Protecting one's own research from bad actors benefits the entire scientific ecosystem — the individual researcher, community, nation and world. Ultimately, research security is about ethical behavior, regardless of background or origin. Ethical behavior is foundational to the conduct of research, and it can only be achieved when everyone can collaborate in an open environment, shielded from the threats of dishonest and unethical behavior.

The benefits of international collaboration

NSF welcomes and encourages international collaboration and views it as essential to pursuing the frontiers of science. The agency has a long history of successful, open research collaborations with nations around the world and strongly maintains that scientific research benefits immensely from international cooperation.

The benefits of principled international collaboration include:

  • Enabling cutting-edge research that no nation can achieve alone.
  • Training a robust science and engineering workforce capable of solving global problems.
  • Allowing for significant contributions from international students and scholars to the U.S. research enterprise.
  • Strengthening scientific and diplomatic relations.
  • Leveraging resources, including funding, expertise and facilities.

Principled international collaboration is critical to success, but improper foreign influence is a threat to international collaboration in the science and technology enterprise. It is important to distinguish the difference.

NSF’s Office of International Science and Engineering

NSF encourages U.S. scientists and engineers to enhance their research and education programs through international collaboration. OISE is dedicated to promoting engagement strategies and managing internationally focused programs and partnerships.

NSF policies and actions

To achieve its goals, NSF has worked diligently to put measures in place that strengthen research security and integrity for the federal funded research community and for NSF staff. Actions include:

  • Emphasizing compliance with disclosure rules in NSF's Proposal and Award Policies and Procedures Guide both for NSF staff and the institutions and researchers funded by NSF.
  • Requiring all NSF personnel to be a U.S. citizen or in the process of becoming a citizen.
  • Requiring each Institution of Higher Education (IHE) who receive NSF funding to submit a Foreign Financial Disclosure Report (FFDR) through research.gov.
  • Barring NSF staff from participating in foreign talent recruitment programs.
  • Requiring annual "Science and Security Training" for all NSF employees.

TRUST: Trusted Research Using Safeguards and Transparency

Developed with the Foundation’s core science mission as a guide, the TRUST framework will guide the agency in assessing grant proposals for potential national security risks. This new policy will help safeguard U.S. taxpayer investments in research and innovation while strengthening international collaboration.

The TRUST framework includes three branches. The first focuses on assessing active appointments, positions, and research support, while the second focuses on identifying instances of noncompliance with disclosure requirements. The third branch — the inclusion of potential foreseeable national security considerations — represents a significant new effort for NSF. The framework is designed to avoid curtailing beneficial research activities due to institutions or individuals in the community being overly cautious, protect the agency's core values of fairness and due process and maintain open lines of communication with the research community. The TRUST framework will be rolled out in a phased approach with a pilot focused on quantum-related projects set to launch in Fiscal Year 2025. 

We will host a series of interactive webinars with a Q&A discussion with participants. The first two of these webinars will be held Tuesday, June 11 at 11am and Thursday, June 20 at 2pm. Registration information for the webinars can be found at the link below. OCRSSP staff are also more than happy to visit institutions directly to hear from administrative staff as well as faculty and students to gain a more holistic understanding of the challenges institutions face as they prepare to engage with the TRUST framework. Finally, we are establishing a dedicated email address for interested parties to submit questions or comments: trust@nsf.gov

Webinar Recordings

June 20, 2024

Trusted Research Using Safeguards and Transparency (TRUST) Process Overview Webinar (link is external)

 

Research security actions

Click on the items below to learn more about NSF’s research security actions:

Training and education in research security best practices

Click on the items below to learn more about training offered by NSF:

Research security analytics guidelines

In 2023, NSF published how it approaches research security data-related practices. The guidelines include a breakdown of which agency personnel may conduct research security-related activities; what monitoring activities are allowed and with what resources they are conducted; how information will be validated to ensure accuracy; and how information may be shared within NSF and externally.

Foreign interference and risk mitigation

NSF's goal is to maintain a vibrant science and engineering community that can participate in domestic and global collaborations. However, there are actors who try to take advantage of the openness of the research community and choose not to uphold the values of the science and engineering community.

Disclosure and transparency

Senior/key personnel disclosures are provided in three distinct sections of an NSF proposal: Collaborator and Other Affiliations, the Biographical Sketch, and Current and Pending (Other) Support. Senior/key personnel must certify that the information provided is current, accurate, and complete, and that they are not a party to a malign foreign talent recruitment program. 

A main issue related to foreign interference in NSF-funded research is the omission of information in senior/key personnel disclosures, including appointments, affiliations and current and pending (other) support from external funding sources. Transparency and disclosure are vital to NSF’s ability to properly assess risk. When information is deliberately omitted or concealed, the award-making process is compromised.

To assess the risk of foreign interference in institutions of higher education that carry out NSF-funded research, institutions of higher education are now required to submit post-award disclosures of financial support received from a foreign source associated with a foreign country of concern. 

Conflicts of interest

The other main category of foreign interference is with conflicts of interest and conflicts of commitment. NSF defines a "conflict of interest" as a situation in which an individual who is responsible for the design, conduct or reporting of research or educational activities funded or proposed for funding by NSF (or the individual's spouse or dependent children) has a significant financial interest or financial relationship that would reasonably appear to be affected by the proposed research or educational activity.

How NSF addresses research security violations

NSF's collaborative, well-established relationship with the OIG has been an important aspect of our response to threats to NSF-funded research from foreign interference. We promptly address potential threats when identified, frequently referring appropriate matters to OIG. Similarly, when appropriate, OIG notifies us of matters requiring our attention. Administrative actions may be recommended by OIG at any point in an investigation. Such actions may include award suspensions, award terminations, government-wide suspensions of PIs and entities, and/or government-wide debarments. The scope of the administrative actions is appropriately tailored to the risk to NSF, based on the information developed by the OIG's investigation at the time of the action is taken.

Additional resources

Notable research security guidance from international entities

 

Tools and definitions

(Below - As defined by OECD/G7)

  • Research integrity: The use of honest and verifiable methods in proposing, performing and evaluating research; reporting research results with particular attention to adherence to rules, regulations and guidelines; and following commonly accepted professional codes or norms.
  • Research security: Safeguarding the research enterprise against the misappropriation of research and development to the detriment of national or economic security, related violations of research integrity and foreign government interference.

 

International Efforts