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  1. Caribbean Heat Threatens Health, Well-being and the Future of Humanity: Table 1.Cheryl C. Macpherson & Muge Akpinar-Elci - 2015 - Public Health Ethics 8 (2):196-208.
    Climate change has substantial impacts on public health and safety, disease risks and the provision of health care, with the poor being particularly disadvantaged. Management of the associated health risks and changing health service requirements requires adequate responses at local levels. Health-care providers are central to these responses. While climate change raises ethical questions about its causes, impacts and social justice, medicine and bioethics typically focus on individual patients and research participants rather than these broader issues. We broaden this focus (...)
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  • Individual responsibility and global structural injustice: Toward an ethos of cosmopolitan responsibility.Jan-Christoph Heilinger - 2021 - Journal of Social Philosophy 52 (2):185-200.
    Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  • On Taking Responsibility for Undocumented Migrants.James Dwyer - 2015 - Public Health Ethics 8 (2):139-147.
    Do societies have an ethical responsibility to care for and about the health of undocumented migrants? Some people claim that societies have no responsibility to care for undocumented migrants because these migrants have no legal right to be in the country. But this view tends to ignore ethical responsibilities that are independent of legal status. Other people claim that all human beings, in virtue of their dignity and status as human beings, have a right to the highest standard of health. (...)
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  • Responding to the Injustice of Climate Change.James Dwyer - 2023 - Public Health Ethics 16 (1):1-8.
    Climate change continues to have profound impacts on people’s health, lives and life prospects. For the most part, people who are at highest risk from the impacts of climate change have contributed very little to the problem. This is the crux of the injustice. After I discuss the risks and contributions associated with the injustice of climate change, I turn to the issue of responsiveness: of why and how people should respond to this injustice. I avoid discussions of legal liability (...)
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  • Feminist bioethics.Anne Donchin - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.