<div dir="ltr">There’s progress on this front: Today, for example, the American Journal of Political Science has beefed-up transparency guidelines requiring its authors to provide ready access to replication data. That will make it easier for the anonymous grad students of the future to discover potential problems — and harder for authors to ignore those problems.<div><br><a href="http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2016/07/why-it-took-social-science-years-to-correct-a-simple-error-about-psychoticism.html">http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2016/07/why-it-took-social-science-years-to-correct-a-simple-error-about-psychoticism.html</a></div><div><b><font color="#0000ff"><br></font></b></div><div><div class="gmail_default"><b style="font-family:arial,helvetica,sans-serif"><font color="#0000ff">​Please encourage your social scientists to deposit the data supporting publication, into your institutional repository.​ See: </font></b><font color="#0000ff" face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif"><b><a href="http://wiki.lib.sun.ac.za/index.php/SUNScholar/How_do_I_submit_my_publication_data_to_SUNScholar">http://wiki.lib.sun.ac.za/index.php/SUNScholar/How_do_I_submit_my_publication_data_to_SUNScholar</a></b></font></div><br></div></div>