Journal of Agricultural Big Data ›› 2024, Vol. 6 ›› Issue (3): 295-306.doi: 10.19788/j.issn.2096-6369.000068

    Next Articles

Rule-Based Framework for Scientific Data Security Governance: A New Tool for Understanding the Imbalance and Challenges of Data Protection and Utilization

WANG Jian1,4,6(), ZHOU GuoMin2,4,6, LIAO FangYu3, XU ZhePing5,7, ZHANG JianHua1,4,6,*(), LIU TingTing1,4   

  1. 1. The Agricultural Information Institute of CAAS, Beijing 100081, China
    2. Nanjing Institute of Agricultural Mechanization, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Nanjing 210014, China
    3. Computer Network Information Center of CAS, Beijing 100083, China
    4. National Agricultural Scientific Data Center, Beijing 100081, China
    5. National Sciences Library of Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing 100190, China
    6. Hainan National Breeding and Multiplication Institute at Sanya, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Sanya 572024, Hainan, China
    7. School of Economics and Management, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
  • Received:2024-06-08 Accepted:2024-09-24 Online:2024-09-26 Published:2024-10-01
  • Contact: ZHANG JianHua

Abstract:

With the implementation of various data security laws and regulations centered on privacy protection, and the emergence of new governance factors such as data sovereignty, technological competition, and geopolitics, the requirements for the "protection" of scientific data have been increasingly elevated. This has objectively suppressed the "utilization" functions of data collection, processing, transmission, and analysis, leading to a significant risk of imbalance between the protection and utilization of scientific data. This imbalance is externally manifested in challenges such as the excessive burden of legal compliance and the weakening availability of public scientific data. The academic community, data managers, and policymakers urgently need effective analytical tools to understand and address these challenges in a systematic way. In response to this gap, this paper proposes a rule-based governance framework for scientific data security, aiming to provide a systematic analytical tool to address the protection-utilization imbalance and related challenges from the perspective of governance rules, including laws, ethics, and institutional policies. This framework integrates the major rule types in scientific data security governance and introduces three analytical tools: the "Island-Bridge Model," the "Law-Ethics Balance," and the "Moderate Implementation" principle, to explain the interaction mechanisms of these rules. The framework establishes the transmission paths between governance rules and the protection-utilization balance and uses these tools to explain two key challenges—excessive compliance burdens and weakened public scientific data availability—demonstrating its explanatory power and practical value. In the context of the long-term tightening of data security regulations, the rule-based analytical perspective and tools proposed in this paper enrich the theoretical foundation of scientific data security governance and provide practical references for addressing these challenges. The framework also offers essential theoretical support for policy communication among the academic community, data managers, and policymakers, ensuring the sustainable utilization of scientific data in the future.

Key words: scientific data governance, scientific data protection, scientific data sharing, scientific data ethics, protection-utilization balance of data