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ABOUT: The iThenticate Blog is an award-winning site that discusses plagiarism and scholarly misconduct issues that affect researchers, editors, authors and graduate students. Join the iThenticate team and guest bloggers in the quest to raise awareness of misconduct, and promote integrity and ethical writing practices by sharing our articles. To contact us, send us an email.

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Hungarian Community Calls for President’s Resignation, Citing Plagiarism

  
  
  

220px Pál Schmitt (2011)Earlier this month Hungarian President Pal Schmitt was accused of plagiarizing his 1992 doctoral thesis. The controversary has heated up as several hundred demonstrators gathered on Saturday calling for his resignation, and claiming he is unfit to be in office.

According to HVG, 180 pages of Schmitt’s 215 page thesis was a "word-for-word translation" of a text written in French by Bulgarian sports historian and diplomat, Nikolai Georgiev (now deceased), who reportedly collaborated on research projects with Schmitt in the 1980s at Budapest Sports University.

President Pal Schmitt has rejected charges of plagiarism. According to Politics.hu, he said that “the paper had been based on primary data, using 21 source materials altogether... the basic material he drew on, some of which was also made use of by the Bulgarian Nikolay Georgiev, was not anyone’s intellectual property.”

The case is currently under investigation by the Hungarian Accreditation Board.

Related: German Defense Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg resigns due to plagiarized doctoral thesis

Check dissertations and thesis for plagiarism before submission

Image courtesy of Wikipedia.

 

Citations

“Presidential plagiarism scandal deepens amid charges passages of thesis copied from German study” January 20, 2012. Politics.hu. http://www.politics.hu/20120120/presidential-plagiarism-scandal-deepens-amid-charges-passages-of-thesis-copied-from-german-study/

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