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Just on the PhD; my understanding is her submission will have been examined and question in some detail along the way, including a viva voce element. I can't imagine an examination panel would just shrug and move on if the arguments upon which much of her PhD was based were not robust.
Just for context, having seen academia in action as my son recently gained his PhD
the PhD is examined by a small panel of experts in the field chosen by the student's mentor. As all academic views (including all sciences) are just a matter of opinion the referees are chosen from a group of like minded academics. Nobody is going to chose referees with violently opposing opinions and then expect them to approve a paper about something they are violently opposed to. It is all a club with club rules. It is very hard not to get a PhD once you are in the system; however there are standards to maintain and it may take more years than expected to get it up to scratch.
You judge a PhD by the reputation of the department, the reputation of the University, and the reputation of the referees. The higher all these are, the higher you tend to rate the PhD. However you have to do a bit of research and/or know people in the system before you can really judge the quality of a PhD. If it (or an abstract) is subsequently chosen for publication in a journal that is usually a plus point.
So you can't place that much trust in the contents of a PhD - it reflects the views of the school the student studies in filtered and refined through like minded experts internal and external to the University.
Academic papers sometimes have a bigger hurdle to jump, because they are subject to peer review and you can't always pick your reviewers. You can, of course, pick your publication if you know their reviewers favour your school of thought. So for a published paper it is not enough to know that it has been reviewed; you need to know the reputation of the journal and also the reputation of the reviewers. [See previous comments about the quality of a PhD.]
There is the infamous case of the paper about MMR vaccinations and autism which was published in the Lancet
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3136032/
which just goes to show that having a paper peer reviewed and published in a very notable journal such as the Lancet doesn't guarantee that the science is watertight. It just shows that at one point in time enough people agreed with the views expressed that they were happy to publish.
Professors are not always infallible either; take the well known case of Professor Sir Roy Collins.
See
https://drmalcolmkendrick.org/2015/02/16/a-humiliating-climb-down-or-a-machiavellian-move/ for example. From that link:
"
To provide a bit more context at this point, you should know that for a number of years, people have been trying to get Rory Collins to release the data he and his unit (the CTT), holds on statins. [The CTT was set up purely to get hold of and review all the data on statins, it has no other function].
He has stubbornly refused to let anyone see anything. He claims he signed non-disclosure contracts with pharmaceutical companies who send him the data, so he cannot allow anyone else access. Please remember that some of the trials he holds data on were done over thirty years ago, and the drugs are long off patent. So how the hell could any data still be ‘confidential’ or ‘commercially sensitive’ now?
[The concept that vital data on drug adverse effects can be considered confidential, and no-one is allowed to see it, is completely ridiculous anyway. But that is an argument for another day.]
"
So here you have a Professor who violently claims that all statins are good but also refuses to release any of the trials that the pharmaceutical companies felt that it was not in their best interest to publish.
Bottom line - trust no-one. Everything published is a personal point of view filtered through the visible and hidden agendas of the author. Just because it is in a fancy journal and has been peer reviewed doesn't make it true.
You probably wouldn't trust an article in the Daily Express even though it has been written by professional journalists and checked by sub-editors and the editor. Apply the same filter to papers published in scientific journals.