b19 — Fact-sheet 5 — Responsibility allocation across asymmetric parties#
- Compiled:
2026m05d13
- Compiled by:
Claude Opus 4.7 Max (subagent for the b19 AI co-authorship analysis)
- Scope:
Six frameworks — corporate liability, principal-agent law, child guardianship, PhD-student/PI, deceased authors, ghostwritten autobiography
- Methodology:
Primary text via WebSearch/WebFetch; uncertainty flagged inline
- Status:
Independent reference document — descriptive, not prescriptive
Reader’s note
This fact-sheet describes six frameworks under which one party carries legal / ethical responsibility for work attributed (in part) to another. It probes whether any of these frameworks supports naming an entity as ‘author’ that cannot bear full accountability the way another named author can. No conclusions about specific cases.
Scope and methodology note#
Compiled via WebSearch snippets; WebFetch was sandbox-
blocked, so quotations are reported from snippets rather than
direct page retrieval. Operative legal text and ICMJE / COPE
statements are cross-checked across multiple snippets where
possible; remaining single-snippet quotations are flagged
[QUOTE NEEDS VERIFICATION]; single-snippet case particulars are
flagged [CASE NEEDS VERIFICATION]; un-triangulated dates are
[DATE NEEDS VERIFICATION]. The six frameworks below each
present a structural asymmetry between two named parties — one of
whom is expected to bear legal / ethical weight that the other
either cannot bear (limited capacity, death, minority status) or
delegates by contract.
Section 1 — Corporate liability and corporate personhood#
1.1 What the framework says#
A corporation is a separate legal person, distinct from its shareholders, directors, officers, and employees. It can hold property, enter contracts, sue and be sued, and — under doctrines discussed below — speak. Three doctrines sit at the core of the asymmetry between the corporation and the natural persons who act through it:
Limited liability. Shareholders are not personally liable for
the debts or obligations of the corporation beyond their
investment. Per the Legal Information Institute (Cornell), the
limited-liability doctrine is the entire structural privilege that
the corporate form exists to provide; courts will only set it aside
(“pierce the corporate veil”) on a showing of serious misconduct.
[1] [2]
Respondeat superior. Latin: “that the master must answer.” Per Cornell LII: respondeat superior
“is a legal doctrine, most commonly used in tort, that holds an employer or principal legally responsible for the wrongful acts of an employee or agent, if such acts occur within the scope of the employment or agency.”
[3]
It is a purely dependent or vicarious theory: liability attaches
to the employer without any showing of fault by the employer. Two
requirements: (i) an employer–employee (not independent-contractor)
relationship; (ii) the tortious act must have occurred within the
scope of employment. [3] [4]
Vicarious liability. A broader umbrella than respondeat superior:
it covers business partners, authorized agents, vehicle-owner and
borrower relationships, etc. Respondeat superior is the subset of
vicarious liability confined to the employment relationship. [3]
[4]
Citizens United v. FEC, 558 U.S. 310 (2010). The U.S. Supreme Court held that laws restricting the political spending of corporations and unions are inconsistent with the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment. The majority opinion (Kennedy, J.) framed corporations as
“associations of citizens” entitled to gather up and exercise the speech rights of those citizens.
[5][QUOTE NEEDS VERIFICATION]
The Court overruled Austin v. Michigan State Chamber of Commerce
and the relevant part of McConnell v. FEC, while upholding
disclaimer-and-disclosure requirements and the ban on direct
corporate contributions. [5] [6]
1.2 Acknowledgement#
In corporate filings, products, and statements, credit is routinely assigned to the corporation as such — the trademark, the brand, the corporate signature line. Individual contributors are typically not named on the public-facing artifact (compare a product label with the byline conventions of scientific publishing). Internal acknowledgement is a matter of contract and HR.
1.4 Responsibility (who is on the hook)#
A bifurcated answer:
Civil and contractual liability: the corporation itself, with shareholders shielded by limited liability except where the corporate veil is pierced.
[1][2]Vicarious tort liability: the corporation (as employer) is liable for employee torts within the scope of employment, even without fault by the corporation as such.
[3]Individual liability: officers, directors, and employees remain personally liable for their own torts and crimes (the corporate form does not absolve individual wrongdoing). Veil- piercing additionally exposes shareholders in cases of fraud, unity-of-interest collapse, or undercapitalization.
[1][2]
Crucially, the corporation can be punished (fines, dissolution, loss of charter) but cannot be imprisoned. The asymmetry between what a corporation can bear (financial / structural penalties) and what a natural person can bear (custodial penalties) is built into the system from the start.
1.5 Does this framework support naming an entity that cannot bear full accountability the way the other named party can? —————————————————————–
Qualified yes. The corporation is named as responsible party for many purposes (contracts, products, political speech) even though it cannot suffer the full set of consequences a natural person can. Offset by (a) vicarious-liability rules pulling human officers and employees into the chain; (b) veil-piercing as escape hatch when the corporate-personhood fiction is abused. Structural reason: the framework gives the corporation a distinct legal personality precisely to allocate certain risks to it, then back- stops that allocation with mechanisms re-attaching responsibility to natural persons when accountability fails.
Section 2 — Principal-agent law in contracts#
2.1 What the framework says#
Agency law governs the relationship in which one party (the agent) acts on behalf of another (the principal). When the agent acts within their authority, contracts they execute bind the principal, not the agent personally — with important exceptions tied to disclosure and authority.
Three principal types. From third-party perspective: disclosed,
partially disclosed, undisclosed. [7]
“A disclosed principal is a person whose existence and identity is made known to the third party through words or the performance of an authorized act, and the third party has notice that the agent is acting for a principal and has notice of the principal’s identity. Under these circumstances, any contract or agreement executed between the agent and a third party is deemed to be a contract or agreement between the principal and the third party.”
[7]
Express vs apparent authority. Express (actual) authority is explicitly conferred by the principal. Apparent authority is
“a situation in which a principal leads a third party to believe that an agent has authority to bind the principal, even where the agent lacks the actual authority to bind the principal”
[7]“that is, on whether or not the third person reasonably believes from the principal’s words, written or spoken, or from his conduct that he has in fact consented to the agent’s actions.”
[7]
Default agent liability rule. Per the standard treatment:
“As a general rule, an agent is not liable on contracts she makes on the principal’s behalf … However, the agent will be liable if he is undisclosed or partially disclosed, if the agent lacks authority or exceeds it, or, of course, if the agent entered into the contract in a personal capacity.”
[8]
Undisclosed-principal liability. Even when the principal is
secret, the principal is still bound by acts of the agent within
actual authority and in the principal’s interest. [9]
Partially disclosed principal (joint-and-several). Principal and
agent are jointly and severally liable; the third party may sue
either or both. [7]
2.2 Acknowledgement#
The agent’s involvement is, by default, named in the negotiation (the agent signs the document). Whether the principal is named depends on disclosure. Ghostwriting, drafting, and substantive- contribution scenarios sit awkwardly in this frame: the drafter is usually treated as agent (their work product is the principal’s product) unless they cross into being a contracting party in their own right.
2.3 Authorship (named-responsible party)#
In a disclosed-principal contract, the principal is the named
party; the agent is identified as such on the signature line (“X,
as agent for Y”). In an undisclosed-principal contract, the agent
is the named party on the face of the document, while the
unmentioned principal nonetheless remains bound behind the scenes. [7]
[9]
2.4 Responsibility (who is on the hook)#
Disclosed: principal is bound; agent is not personally liable on the contract (subject to authority and personal-capacity exceptions).
[8]Partially disclosed: principal and agent jointly and severally liable.
[7]Undisclosed: principal bound; agent personally liable on the face of the contract until / unless the principal is revealed; in some formulations the third party can elect between agent and principal.
[8][9]Apparent authority: principal bound even where actual authority was lacking, provided the third party’s belief was reasonable.
[7]
2.5 Does this framework support naming an entity that cannot bear full accountability the way the other named party can? —————————————————————–
Qualified yes — but only via disclosure. The framework is structured around the asymmetry that one named party (often the agent) signs but does not ultimately bear responsibility, while a second party (the principal) bears responsibility but may or may not be named. The price of asymmetry is disclosure: if the principal is not disclosed, the agent moves onto the hook personally. Structural reason: agency law protects the third party — there must always be some solvent counterparty to recover against, even if the named one is not the ultimate decision-maker.
Section 3 — Child guardianship and ward-of-court relations#
3.1 What the framework says#
Two Latin doctrines anchor the child–adult asymmetry:
Parens patriae (parent of the nation):
“in law, parens patriae is the public policy power of the state to intervene against an abusive or negligent parent, legal guardian, or informal caretaker, and to act as the parent of any child, individual or animal who is in need of protection.”
[10]“Latin for ‘parent of the nation,’ it is the legal doctrine that gives the state the authority — and the obligation — to intervene and act as a legal protector for vulnerable citizens.”
[11]
In loco parentis (in the place of a parent):
“The term in loco parentis, Latin for ‘in the place of a parent’, refers to the legal responsibility of a person or organization to take on some of the functions and responsibilities of a parent.”
[12]
In loco parentis is most commonly invoked for schools and similar institutions, and for non-biological caregivers who have held themselves out as parents.
Guardian ad litem (GAL) / CASA. In court proceedings involving children, a guardian ad litem is appointed to investigate and advocate for the child’s best interests:
“This person is not the child’s lawyer, but an independent ‘arm of the court’ whose job is to investigate the situation and advocate for the child’s best interests.”
[10]
3.2 Acknowledgement#
The child’s interests, identity, and (where possible) voice are acknowledged throughout the proceeding — the GAL exists precisely to ensure that the child’s perspective is presented to the court even though the child cannot represent themselves. The child is recognised as a person whose preferences matter; they are simply not yet the legally responsible person.
3.3 Authorship (named-responsible party)#
For legal acts requiring capacity (contracts, litigation, significant medical decisions), the guardian — or, failing a private guardian, the state under parens patriae — is the named responsible party. The child is the named beneficiary but not the named obligor. The child’s status as a minor is itself a publicly visible flag; counterparties know they are dealing with a guardian.
3.4 Responsibility (who is on the hook)#
Responsibility runs to the guardian (and to the state in default of a competent guardian). Minors generally cannot be held to contracts on the same terms as adults (the infancy doctrine: contracts with minors are typically voidable at the minor’s option, with limited exceptions for necessaries). Guardians owe fiduciary duties to the ward and can be removed or held liable for breach.
3.5 Does this framework support naming an entity that cannot bear full accountability the way the other named party can? —————————————————————–
Qualified yes. The framework names the child as the person whose interests and preferences matter, while routing legal responsibility through the guardian. Three offsetting features keep it honest: (a) the guardian’s authority is bounded by the child’s best interests; (b) the child gains capacity at majority — defined sunset; (c) the state under parens patriae will displace a guardian whose decisions harm the child. Structural reason: the legal system protects the less-capable party by routing responsibility to a more-capable party while preserving the less-capable party’s identity, voice, and growth toward capacity.
Section 4 — PhD-student / PI relationships in scientific publishing#
4.1 What the framework says#
The default authorship framework for biomedical / life-sciences
publishing is the ICMJE recommendation, which requires that authors
meet all four of the following criteria: [13]
“Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; AND Drafting the work or reviewing it critically for important intellectual content; AND Final approval of the version to be published; AND Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.”
[13]
The fourth criterion was added in 2013 specifically
“to emphasize each author’s responsibility to stand by the integrity of the entire work.”
[13][DATE NEEDS VERIFICATION]
Further:
“In addition to being accountable for the parts of the work done, an author should be able to identify which co-authors are responsible for specific other parts of the work. In addition, authors should have confidence in the integrity of the contributions of their co-authors.”
[13]
4.3 The PhD-student / PI structural question#
ICMJE’s four criteria contain no carve-out for career stage. A PhD student who substantively contributed to design / acquisition, drafted the paper, approved the version, and agrees to be accountable meets the criteria exactly as a senior PI does.
However, two structural realities complicate the symmetric reading:
The PI provides funding, conceptual framing, lab infrastructure, and final say. The student typically does the bench work and first draft. The lab-in-question convention (life sciences) is to list productive students as co-authors despite the visible capacity asymmetry: the student is junior, often pre-defense, and may lack the long-term institutional standing to be sued, fined, debarred, or subjected to retraction-driven career destruction in the same way a tenured PI can be.
In retraction and misconduct cases, courts and investigatory panels have not converged on a uniform allocation rule. The question is open enough that ICMJE itself notes the requirement that each author “be able to identify which co-authors are responsible for specific other parts of the work” — i.e., the framework explicitly contemplates distributed accountability rather than uniform accountability per byline slot.
[13]
4.4 Retraction cases as evidence on allocation#
Jan Hendrik Schön (Bell Labs, 2002). Schön fabricated data in
papers published in Science, Nature, and elsewhere; Bell Labs
fired him in September 2002 after the Beasley committee
investigation. [15] Co-authors Zhenan Bao and Christian Kloc
were “absolved of any complicity in the fraud.” [15]
[CASE NEEDS VERIFICATION] On the broader question of co-author
responsibility, the Beasley report framed it as “an issue not of
scientific misconduct but of professional responsibility” [15]
and noted that “no clear, widely accepted standards of behaviour
exist, because it is an issue that ‘the scientific community has
not considered carefully’.” [15]
Hwang Woo-suk (2005 stem-cell case). Hwang’s Science papers
on human embryonic stem cells were retracted as fabricated. [16]
Senior co-author Gerald Schatten (University of Pittsburgh) was
found “guilty of research misbehavior for shirking his
responsibilities as senior author on the 2005 paper” [16] but
“cleared of scientific misconduct by the University of Pittsburgh,
but chided for taking so much credit for research in which he was
barely involved.” [16] [CASE NEEDS VERIFICATION] The
Pittsburgh committee found “no evidence that Schatten had been
aware of Hwang’s misconduct” but that “Schatten had not exercised
a sufficiently critical perspective as a scientist because he did
not react to changes of results and procedures that should have
roused suspicion.” [17] It was also reported that Schatten was
“the sole signatory of the submitted cover letter for one of the
fraudulent papers, in which it was stated that all authors agreed
they had read and approved the manuscript, though information
suggests that only a few of the 25 authors read the manuscript.”
[17] [QUOTE NEEDS VERIFICATION]
General principle. Per peer-reviewed discussion of co-author responsibility cases, the investigative committee in the Hwang case
“stressed that the responsibility of co-authors was distinguishable from scientific misconduct, and they found responsibility a complicated issue that varied with the co-authors’ expertise, their contributions, and their role in the collaboration.”
[17]
4.5 Does this framework support naming an entity that cannot bear full accountability the way the other named party can? —————————————————————–
Qualified yes, with strain. The ICMJE rule is formally symmetric — every author must meet all four criteria — but life- sciences practice lists junior co-authors who do not bear PI-level institutional accountability. The framework manages strain by (a) treating authorship as a declared claim (the question is not “can they bear it?” but “have they declared they will?”); (b) distributing accountability by part of the work, not uniform across the byline (each author must “be able to identify which co-authors are responsible for specific other parts”); (c) treating ex-post responsibility allocation as fact-specific, with senior authors found institutionally responsible even when cleared of direct misconduct. Structural reason: science publishing distinguishes credit-for-contribution from legal / institutional accountability, recording both on the byline while reallocating accountability case by case when something goes wrong.
Section 6 — Ghostwritten autobiography conventions#
6.1 What the framework says#
Ghostwriting in autobiography / memoir publishing is governed primarily by contract between the named author (the celebrity / politician / executive subject) and the ghostwriter, plus the publishing contract with the publisher. There is no industry-wide mandatory disclosure standard analogous to ICMJE; conventions vary by publisher, genre, and the named author’s preferences.
Naming convention. Three patterns predominate:
No ghostwriter on cover. The named author appears alone; the ghostwriter’s role is acknowledged inside the book or kept confidential by NDA.
“with X.” “[Named author] with [Ghostwriter]” on the cover — partial disclosure, ghostwriter credited as collaborator.
“as told to X.” Strong disclosure: the named author’s voice is the source; the ghostwriter shaped the prose.
The genre advice for the named author has been described as:
“beat the critics to the punch and admit you used a ghostwriter up front, giving them a ‘with’ or an ‘as told to’.”
[20]
6.2 Representations and warranties#
Standard ghostwriting contracts allocate warranties explicitly: [21]
“Representations and warranties are promises that the work will not infringe copyrights, contain defamatory statements, violate anyone’s right of privacy, or otherwise cause harm. For the ghostwriter, there may be a warranty that all material she contributes will be original, and for the client, that any case histories provided are accurate and non-libelous.”
[21]
Indemnification:
“An indemnity is a fellow traveler. It’s a promise to reimburse publishers, booksellers, and licensees if they are sued or threatened with a lawsuit. If a third party sues over the content (for example, claiming copyright infringement or defamation), the ghostwriter agrees to protect you from liability related to their work.”
[21]
Defamation allocation:
“Defamation: The client asks the ghostwriter to include false, damaging statements about a third party. In this scenario, both the client and the ghostwriter could theoretically be liable for libel, though the client usually bears the brunt of the responsibility as the publisher.”
[21][QUOTE NEEDS VERIFICATION]
6.4 Acknowledgement#
By convention the ghostwriter is either:
unnamed (with no internal mention; their contribution is absorbed into the named-author byline), or
credited internally (acknowledgements page: “I could not have written this without X”), or
credited on cover (“with X” / “as told to X”).
The choice is a contract term, not a fixed industry rule.
6.5 Authorship (named-responsible party)#
The named author is the author for legal and reputational purposes. They sign the contract with the publisher; they adopt the manuscript by final approval; they answer for content in interviews, media tours, and litigation.
6.6 Responsibility (who is on the hook)#
Primarily the named author — reinforced by warranties and adoption of the manuscript. Ghostwriter liability is largely internal to the named-author/ghostwriter contract: warranties of originality and non-defamation in the ghostwriter’s contributions flow back to the named author via indemnification. Third parties typically sue the named author and the publisher; the named author may then pursue the ghostwriter under the contract.
6.7 Does this framework support naming an entity that cannot bear full accountability the way the other named party can? —————————————————————–
Direct yes — but inverted. Here the named author bears full accountability while the contributing party (ghostwriter) bears only contract-internal warranty liability and is often not named at all. The framework assumes the contributor can be removed from the byline while still being credited (or not) at the named author’s discretion, with the named author absorbing forward- facing accountability through final approval. Structural reason: the publishing relationship treats the named author as the public voice and the ghostwriter as a supplier of writing services; accountability is contractually concentrated on one party by design.
Section 7 — Cross-framework synthesis table#
The table below summarises each framework against three questions — acknowledgement, authorship (named-responsible party), and responsibility (who is on the hook) — plus the asymmetric-authorship support column.
Framework |
Acknowledgement |
Authorship (named) |
Responsibility |
Supports asymmetric authorship? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Credit attaches to the corporation as such (brand, trademark, corporate signature); individuals usually not named publicly. |
The corporation is the named party for products, contracts, and (post-Citizens United) political speech. |
Corporation bears civil/contract liability; employees pull in via respondeat superior; officers liable for own torts; veil-piercing exposes shareholders on misconduct. |
Qualified yes. The corporation is named even though it cannot suffer custodial penalties; offset by vicarious-liability rules and veil-piercing. |
|
Agent’s name appears on negotiation; principal’s name appears iff disclosed. |
Disclosed: principal is named party. Undisclosed: agent is named on the face. Partially disclosed: both. |
Disclosed: principal liable, agent not. Undisclosed / partial: agent personally liable (with principal also bound). Apparent authority binds principal anyway. |
Qualified yes — but only with disclosure. Asymmetric naming is supported only when disclosed; non-disclosure pushes liability onto the agent. |
|
Child’s identity, voice, and interests named throughout; GAL ensures presentation to the court. |
Guardian is the named legal-act party; child is the named beneficiary. |
Guardian bears responsibility (fiduciary duty); state under parens patriae as ultimate back-stop; minor’s contractual capacity limited (infancy doctrine). |
Qualified yes. Asymmetry is structural and visible; bounded by best-interest rule and by the child gaining capacity at majority. |
|
Acknowledgements section for sub-criterion contributors; co-authorship for those meeting all four ICMJE criteria. |
Byline lists each contributor meeting all four ICMJE criteria. Career-stage asymmetries are not formally encoded. |
All authors declare accountability; in practice retraction cases allocate responsibility fact-specifically (Schön co-authors absolved |
Qualified yes, with strain. Formal rule is symmetric; practice tolerates capacity asymmetry by treating accountability as declared-and-distributed rather than uniform. |
|
COPE: move to acknowledgements if contribution insufficient; else footnote with date of death. |
Byline retention permitted with visible “deceased” marker, contribution declaration by corresponding author, and estate consent. |
ICMJE 4th criterion (“accountable for all aspects”) cannot be met by a deceased author |
Qualified yes — with explicit transparency. Cleanest precedent for decoupling credit-for-contribution from forward accountability, via visible marker + accountability-absorption by survivors. |
|
Three patterns: unnamed, internal acknowledgement, or cover credit (“with X” / “as told to X”). |
Named author = the public-voice party (celebrity / executive / politician); ghostwriter often not on byline. |
Named author bears public / legal liability via warranty and final-approval adoption; ghostwriter’s warranties run internally with indemnification. |
Direct yes — but inverted. Named party bears all accountability; contributing party is often unnamed. Opposite of the AI-co-author asymmetry. |
Section 8 — Cross-cutting structural observations#
8.2 The “visible marker” as recurring honesty device#
Each framework that permits asymmetric naming flags the capacity gap with a visible marker: the corporate suffix (“Inc.”, “Ltd.”, “GmbH”); the agent signature line (“X, as agent for Y”); the minor’s status plus guardian-of-record; the asterisk + “deceased” byline footnote; the “with X” / “as told to X” memoir credit. Without the marker, the framework either reclassifies the asymmetry as deception (undisclosed principal, hidden ghostwriter) or shifts the responsibility burden to fill the gap.
8.3 The accountability-absorption mechanism#
Where asymmetric naming is permitted, a named or nameable party explicitly absorbs the accountability function: corporate officers plus respondeat superior route it from the corporation; the disclosed principal (or, on non-disclosure, the agent) absorbs contract liability; the guardian (and the state in default) absorbs the child’s; the corresponding author absorbs the deceased author’s; the named memoir author absorbs the ghostwriter’s. Asymmetric naming without a named absorber is not a recognised form in any of the six frameworks studied.
8.4 Where the frameworks differ in kind#
Corporate personhood and principal-agent law are legally structured asymmetries (codified, litigated). Child guardianship is a protective asymmetry that sunsets at majority. PhD-student / PI is an aspirational-pedagogical asymmetry — symmetric on paper, case-specific ex post. Deceased-author is a retrospective asymmetry: credit survives, forward accountability cannot. Ghostwriter is a commercial asymmetry, contractually concentrated by design.
Section 9 — Footnoted sources#
Sources reported from WebSearch result snippets compiled
2026m05d13; direct WebFetch retrieval was sandbox-blocked.
Single-snippet quotations are flagged [QUOTE NEEDS
VERIFICATION] above.
[1] Cornell Legal Information Institute — piercing the
corporate veil. https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/piercing_the_corporate_veil
[2] Wolters Kluwer — Piercing the Corporate Veil: LLC and
Corporation Risks.
https://www.wolterskluwer.com/en/expert-insights/piercing-the-veil-of-small-business-what-the-owners-of-llcs-and-corporations-need-to-know
[3] Cornell Legal Information Institute — respondeat
superior. https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/respondeat_superior
[4] Wikipedia — Respondeat superior.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respondeat_superior
[5] Wikipedia — Citizens United v. FEC.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC
[6] Justia — Citizens United v. FEC | 558 U.S. 310 (2010).
https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/558/310/
[7] Free Hill, Nichter & Lawson, P.C. — Third Parties Beware
of the Agent Who Does Not Disclose the Identity of the Principal.
https://fhnylaw.com/third-parties-beware-agent-not-disclose-identity-principal/
[8] Saylor Academy / Lardbucket — Agent’s Personal Liability
for Torts and Contracts; Termination of Agency.
https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_legal-aspects-of-corporate-management-and-finance/s13-03-agent-s-personal-liability-for.html
[9] Cornell Legal Information Institute — undisclosed
principal. https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/undisclosed_principal
[10] Wikipedia — Parens patriae.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parens_patriae
[11] US Law Explained — Parens Patriae: The Ultimate Guide to
the State’s Power to Protect. https://uslawexplained.com/parens_patriae
[12] Wikipedia — In loco parentis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_loco_parentis
[13] ICMJE — Defining the Role of Authors and Contributors.
https://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/roles-and-responsibilities/defining-the-role-of-authors-and-contributors.html
[14] ICMJE — AI use by authors (2023 update).
https://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/artificial-intelligence/ai-use-by-authors.html
[15] Wikipedia — Schön scandal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%B6n_scandal
[16] Wikipedia — Hwang affair (and related sources).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hwang_affair
[17] NCBI PMC — Co-author responsibility.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4198033/
[18] Science Editor — The Authorship of Deceased Scientists
and Their Posthumous Responsibilities.
https://www.csescienceeditor.org/article/the-authorship-of-deceased-scientists-and-their-posthumous-responsibilities/
[19] COPE — Author deceased prior to submission (case
guidance). https://publicationethics.org/guidance/case/author-deceased-prior-submission
[20] Gotham Ghostwriters — Should You Write Your Book
Yourself, Get a Coach, or Hire a Ghostwriter?.
https://gothamghostwriters.com/should-you-write-your-book-yourself-get-a-coach-or-hire-a-ghostwriter-a-few-things-to-consider/
[21] Copylaw — Collaboration and Ghost Writer Agreements.
https://www.copylaw.org/p/drafting-negotiating-collaboration_07.html
Section 10 — Verification flags collected#
Inline flags for downstream verification — [QUOTE NEEDS
VERIFICATION]: §1 “associations of citizens” phrasing in Citizens
United; §4 Schatten “sole signatory” detail; §6 defamation
“brunt of the responsibility as the publisher” wording. [DATE
NEEDS VERIFICATION]: §4 2013 date for ICMJE’s fourth criterion.
[CASE NEEDS VERIFICATION]: §4 Schön case (Bao / Kloc absolution)
and Schatten Pittsburgh-committee wording — snippet text used where
direct retrieval was not possible.
End of fact-sheet
Descriptive only — no conclusions drawn here about the b19 AI co-authorship question.