Killing time in the UChicago stacks in the summer of 2019, I found a book from 1995 called Fraud and Erroneous Judgment in the Social Sciences. It's been an interesting read, because despite having been written nearly 25 years ago, much of it reads like it was written today. Specifically, there is very little substance about actually preventing, detecting, or prosecuting fraud, presumably because all these things are very difficult to do.