Basic Books
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Headquarters location | New York, New York, United States |
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Parent organizations | Hachette Books |
Founders | Arthur Rosenthal |
Founded | 1952 |
Country of origin | United States |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1136931 |
About Basic Books
Basic Books is a book publisher founded in 1952 and located in New York, now an imprint of Hachette Books. It publishes books in the fields of psychology, philosophy, economics, science, politics, sociology, current affairs, and history.
Rachel Reeves denies claims of plagiarism in new book
By Becky MortonPolitical reporter
Rachel Reeves has denied claims of plagiarism, after it emerged some passages of her new book were lifted from sources including Wikipedia.
The Shadow chancellor's book included reproduced material without acknowledgment.
A spokesperson for Ms Reeves rejected The accusations, adding: " These were inadvertent mistakes and will be rectified in future reprints. "
Tory chairman Greg Hands said The claims were " potentially very serious".
The Book , The Women Who Made Modern Economics, was launched at an Institute for Government event on Wednesday evening.
Ms Reeves, a former Bank of England economist, is hoping to become The country's first female chancellor if Labour wins The Next general election.
The Financial Times said its reporters had spotted More Than 20 examples of apparent plagiarism in The Book , including entire sentences and paragraphs.
It said these mostly contained biographical information.
The Bbc has checked The examples highlighted by The FT and found some material in The Book was very similar to online sources.
For example, a sentence about The Relationship between author H. G. Wells and economist Beatrice Webb is identical to one.
Another paragraph about international aid under New Labour is very similar to a foreword Written By Hilary Benn , who is now The Shadow Northern Ireland secretary,
Only a few words in The paragraph in The Book differ from Mr Benn 's foreword.
Publisher Basic Books said: " When factual sentences were taken from primary sources, they should have been rewritten and properly referenced.
" We acknowledge this did not happen in every case. As always in instances such as these, we will review all sources and ensure any omissions are rectified in future reprints. "
The Statement added: " At no point did Rachel seek to present these facts as original research.
" There is an extensive and selective bibliography of over 200 books, articles and interviews.
" Where facts are taken from multiple sources, no author would be expected to reference each and every one. "
Mr Hands said Ms Reeves needed to " explain herself urgently".
" Labour literally have no new plans for This Country , " he wrote on X, branding Ms Reeves a " copy and paste shadow chancellor".
A source close to Ms Reeves said she wrote The Book herself but was helped by research assistants, who worked on biographical material.
They stressed " this is factual stuff, not views, policies or ideas".
At The Book 's launch event, which took place The evening before The Financial Times article was published, Ms Reeves was asked how she found The Time to write it.
In response She Said : " My Day job is pretty consuming and I've got two primary aged children but I wanted to carve out Time to write this book.
" In The acknowledgements I acknowledged The research assistants That I had, particularly on The facts and The Detail That went into The pen portraits of The Women That I speak about.
" And That came from a range of sources, from books, from interviews, from articles, from Wikipedia. "
Book launches at Westminster are ten-a-penny.
You can measure how an author is perceived - and which way The political wind is thought to be blowing - by who and how many turn out for a book launch.
If you manage to justify having an " overflow room" and there is an excitable vibe about The warm White Wine clutching attendees, Westminster is collectively saying you're on The Up .
At Rachel Reeves 's book launch on Wednesday night, there was That vibe and there was That overflow room.
The whole thing oozed with a sense of perceived imminent power: That The author of The Book , The Women Who Made Modern Economics, would soon be chancellor of The exchequer.
Well, let's See - That 's for The electorate to decide.
But with hindsight her reference to Wikipedia in The question and answer Session - which struck me as odd at The Time - Sounds rather like a reference in advance to The criticism she knew was coming.
The whole premise of her book is there has been a whole load of economists overlooked and uncredited for their work.
So it's unfortunate, to say The least, That That is precisely what she is now being accused of.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com