Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carley accused of plagiarism in his thesis of Oxford’s thesis

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Caryy was accused of plagiarism parts of his thesis from the University of Oxford on the economy a few weeks before the voters decide if he should continue in his role.
According to reports, the accusations were made by three academics chosen to evaluate the thesis of the liberal leader of 1995 for his doctorate by the conservative newspaper the National post.
The three academics have identified ten “potential” plagiarism, according to the document.
One of these, Geoffrey Sigalet, a member of the Disciplinary Committee of students of the University of British Columbia, said he believed that Carney had used the work of others in an inappropriate way in his 300 pages entitled The dynamic advantage of competition.
“He is repeating directly without quotes. This is what we call plagiarism,” Sigalet said to the post.
One of the other three academics agreed with Sigalet, but he did not want his name to be revealed in the article because he feared he could be sued by Carney.
The Supervisor of the Carney’s thesis defended his work.
“I think you are erroneously characterizing this job,” said Margaret Meyer, an American economist and a member of the economy at the Nuffield College of the University of Oxford National post.
“As an academic of almost 40 years, I don’t see any proof of the plagiarism in the thesis you mentioned, nor unusual academic practices,” he underlined.
“Mark’s thesis was evaluated and approved by a faculty committee that saw her work for what it is: an impressive and carefully studied analysis that distinguished him from his peers,” Meyer said.
A spokesman for the liberal campaign, Isabella Orozco-Madison, has defined the accusations an “irresponsible incorrect characterization” of Carney’s work.

The Carney office has not yet commented on the accusations.
Carryy often referred to his thesis to a 1990 book “The competitive advantage of nations. ” But the critics brought by Send He said he had not sufficiently credited him.
Carney was also accused of using some exact phrases and some complete phrases of the book, as well as parts of the phrasing from three academic articles.
Meyer defended the inclusion of the sentences, saying that it is “typical that the superimposed language appears” when the sources are “frequently referenced in an academic text”.
Carney, Edmonton, Alberta, graduated in Economics from Harvard before obtaining a master’s degree at the St Peter’s College in Oxford and a doctorate in Nuffield.
Carryy made an oath at the beginning of this month as Canadian Prime Minister, replacing Justin Trudeau in the midst of a hostile commercial war and the increasingly acidic relationships of Trudeau with President Donald Trump, who repeatedly denigrated the northern nation as a 51st state of America and derived Trudeau as a mere governor.
Trump and Carney shared their first phone call on Friday, and both men said they planned to start commercial negotiations soon.
Trump characterized the call as “productive” and dropped his shiny public comments on the fact that Canada became an American state. He also told journalists later that he He did not believe that Canada had taken care of the United States unjustly in trade.
In a surprisingly dramatic reversal of his tone on the nearby nation in the recent past, Trump said: “I think things work very well between Canada and the United States”.