01Jul26e The RBT story goes on Journal Backs Away From Article Critical of Congress and Psychology AssociationBy JENNIFER K. RUARK The Chronicle of Higher Education, May 23, 2001 The editor of American Psychologist, a leading psychology journal, has reneged on an agreement to publish an article critical of the journal's sponsor and of several members of Congress.
The author, Scott O. Lilienfeld, an associate professor of psychology at Emory
University, describes his article -- originally titled "The Bonfire of
the Vilifiers" -- as an analysis of what happens "when social
science and politics collide." In it, he charges the American
Psychological Association with caving in to Congressional pressure when it
apologized for an article about childhood sexual abuse written by Temple
University's Bruce Rind and others. The article appeared in the association's
journal Psychological Bulletin.
Mr. Lilienfeld's article was scheduled to appear in the group's other journal,
American Psychologist, in June. But on May 10 the journal's editor, Richard
McCarty, wrote a letter to Mr. Lilienfeld overruling the guest editor who had
accepted the manuscript based on three favorable reviews, and with Mr.
McCarty's initial blessing.
"It may not be censorship but it raises the specter of censorship, and
raises concerns about the suppression of writings that are critical of the
A.P.A. or that are critical of members of Congress," said Mr. Lilienfeld.
Mr. McCarty wrote in his letter that he was concerned about the manuscript's
"narrow focus and tone" and that he had solicited five additional
reviews unbeknownst to Mr. Lilienfeld. Noting that the American Psychologist
is "a vehicle for organizational policy," he suggested that Mr.
Lilienfeld either submit the manuscript to another journal or "delete the
first part of the manuscript that deals with the
Rind et al. article" and use other examples to illustrate the tensions between scientists and policy makers.
Mr. McCarty refused to comment to The Chronicle, citing ethical obligations
not to discuss an article under review.
"The article is not under review," said Mr. Lilienfeld. "One
can always claim that he is merely asking for revisions, but what he is asking
would entirely eviscerate the article of its content, and I will not be
revising it." He is appealing the decision to the association's board of
publications.
The association's chief executive officer, Raymond D. Fowler, did comment in a
memorandum posted on a psychology e-mail list where Mr. Lilienfeld had aired
his case. Although he is editor in chief of American Psychologist, Mr. Fowler
said he would recuse himself from any decision making on the Lilienfeld
article because he had been directly involved in the original controversy over
the article about sexual abuse. In response to accusations that Mr. McCarty's
decision had been politically motivated, Mr. Fowler wrote, "I don't think
anyone who knows Richard thinks of him as a political animal or
particularly politically motivated."
Mr. Lilienfeld suggested that Mr. McCarty should not have been involved in the
publication decision either, because he is the psychology association's
executive director for science and thus implicitly criticized in Mr.
Lilienfeld's article.
But Mr. McCarty initially supported the decision of the guest editor, Nora
Newcombe (who is also at Temple) to publish the article. In a January 23
e-mail message to Mr. Lilienfeld, he wrote: "Nora let me know that your
paper was accepted for publication in A.P. Congratulations! I understand you
are
revising it now. I hope you will agree with Nora's suggestions to modify the tone and the title. I think it will be longer lived if you do. Once you and she are satisfied with it, we will get it into the pipeline as quickly as possible."
In a subsequent message, he advised Mr. Lilienfeld to "do the best you
can with the 'tone' issue without stripping the manuscript of its
essence."
Ms. Newcombe did not return a telephone call seeking comment, but the e-mail
messages indicate that Mr. McCarty was referring to advice from three peer
reviewers who had recommended acceptance pending a softening of the tone. A
fourth reviewer had recommended rejection but agreed instead to contribute a
critical commentary to the same issue of the journal. But that reviewer
withdrew his commentary after reading Mr. Lilienfeld's revision (retitled
"When Worlds Collide"), saying that the new version was "quite
a bit more compelling than the original article."
Ms. Newcombe thanked Mr. Lilienfeld for his "responsive revision"
and said it had her "final acceptance" although it would be
fact-checked.
As far as Mr. Lilienfeld knew, his article was working its way through the
publication process. In response to a query in early April, the managing
editor, Melissa Warren, informed him that the June issue was full and that she
was still processing his manuscript.
A month and a half later, he received Mr. McCarty's letter informing him of
the additional peer reviewers. One of the five experts in childhood sexual
abuse and science policy feared, with Mr. McCarty, that the article would be
taken as "a ringing defense" of Rind et al.
Mr. Lilienfeld says he has no opinion on the Rind research, which analyzed
existing studies of childhood sexual abuse and concluded that not all
instances of sex between adults and children cause psychological harm to
children. The article took care to distinguish between moral or legal
"wrongfulness" and scientific "harmfulness," but created
an uproar two years ago among religious groups and conservative members of
Congress, who said the psychology association was endorsing
pedophilia.
Under pressure from Rep. Tom DeLay, a Texas Republican, and others, the
association apologized for the article and sought a review of its findings
from an independent panel of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science. That panel declined to conduct the review.
"I don't know if [Rind and his colleagues] are right," says Mr.
Lilienfeld. "I was objecting to the way it was handled, and the threats
to academic freedom. I never expected to become part of the saga myself."
On Monday, he resigned from the American Psychological Association.
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