Plagiarism On 17 October 2005, Paul Litterick of the
New Zealand Association of Rationalists and Humanists used
Copyscape a web-based plagiarism detection service, to analyse Logan's published newspaper work. He alleged
plagiarism in Logan's work, and published the results in the
Fundy Post (Issues 18 and 19), an online chronicle of the alleged excesses of New Zealand conservative Christians and other faith-based elements. Litterick found that some of Logan's work was taken (with permission) from Anglo-American sources, which include
The Heritage Foundation,
Institute for American Values,
National Fatherhood Institute,
Maggie Gallagher (a U.S. social conservative journalist),
Melanie Phillips (UK),
Conservative Christian Fellowship (UK) and
Digby Anderson,
Social Affairs Unit (UK). Later that year, Logan retired from the Maxim Institute.
"NZ Votes" In 2005 the Maxim Institute ran a project leading up to the
New Zealand general election, 2005 called "NZ Votes." The campaign featured a [https://web.archive.org/web/20050811001025/http://www.nzvotes.org/ website and 30 debates between electorate candidates around the country. On its website, the NZ Votes project described itself as a "non profit and non partisan" and as a "community service" designed to inform voters about MMP. However,
Nicky Hager criticised the Institute's candidate database in his book
The Hollow Men (2006), and also alleged that there had been close ties between the
New Zealand National Party and a series of educational policy booklets that attacked
New Zealand Labour Party government stances on such issues. However another book,
The Baubles of Office, by Stephen Levine and Nigel Roberts, makes a point of highlighting the political neutrality of nzvotes.org. In June 2011, the Institute advertised that it had invited
Iain Duncan Smith, United Kingdom Secretary of State for Welfare and Pensions, head of the
Centre for Social Justice and former leader of the Conservative Party of the United Kingdom and the Opposition (2001—2003). This has raised some questions about whether the Institute's days of social conservative emphasis are as far behind it as its recent public policy statements and analyses suggest. Duncan Smith is an outspoken
social conservative on issues like abortion, civil partnerships and inclusive adoption reform in the United Kingdom
Frank Ellis visit In 2004, Dr
Frank Ellis, a
University of Leeds lecturer, spoke at a conference hosted by the Maxim Institute on
political correctness and its reputed origins in
Soviet Communism. Ellis was later suspended from his post when it emerged he had endorsed the
British National Party, and for his alleged ties to white nationalist groups. ==References==