The American Chamber of Research (ACR) Code of Conduct is the ethical backbone of the organization. Because the ACR focuses on “The Bridge” between lab-bench theory and real-world industry, its ethical standards go beyond traditional academic honesty to include Industrial Accountability and Research Transparency.

⚖️ The Four Pillars of the ACR Code of Conduct

1. Integrity in Data & Innovation

Members must uphold the highest standards of technical accuracy.

  • Anti-Fabrication: Researchers must never manipulate data to fit a desired industrial outcome.
  • Replicability: In the spirit of “Industrial Scalability,” all research frameworks must be documented clearly enough for third-party verification.
  • Intellectual Property: Members must strictly respect patent laws and provide proper attribution for collaborative multidisciplinary work.

2. The “Explainable” Mandate (XAI)

As the ACR frequently validates research, it enforces a unique standard for algorithmic transparency.

  • Human-Centric Design: Research must prioritize safety and human well-being over pure efficiency.
  • Auditability: Members are encouraged to develop models that are “Explainable”—meaning the decision-making process can be audited by non-technical stakeholders.

3. Professionalism in Global Consultancy

Members acting as ACR-validated consultants represent the prestige of the Chamber.

  • Conflict of Interest: Members must disclose any financial interests that could bias their research findings or consulting advice.
  • Confidentiality: Researchers must protect proprietary industry data obtained during consultancy, maintaining a firewall between public research and private corporate intelligence.

4. Multidisciplinary Responsibility

The ACR believes that innovation in one field should not cause harm in another.

  • Cross-Domain Ethics: A researcher developing a tool for “Financial Optimization” must consider the socio-economic impact on the labor market or the environment.
  • Collaboration: Members must foster an inclusive environment that values the contribution of diverse academic and industrial perspectives.

🚫 Grounds for Decertification (Removal of MACR Status)

The Governing Council reserves the right to revoke Standard Membership for the following violations:

  1. Peer-Review: Engaging in “citation rings”.
  2. Unethical AI Deployment: Using ACR-validated research to create technologies that violate international human rights or data privacy laws.
  3. Misrepresentation: Falsifying the “Industrial ROI” or “Socio-Economic Impact” metrics in a Fellowship Dossier.