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  1. Oppressive Medical Objects and Spaces: Response to Commentaries.Shen-yi Liao & Vanessa Carbonell - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (4):W13-W18.
    In “Materialized Oppression in Medical Tools and Technologies”, we show how oppression can be inscribed in medical devices. We consider oximeters and spirometers, drawing heavily on the work of anthropologist Amy Moran-Thomas and historian Lundy Braun. Both devices encode racial biases: oximeters because they do not correct for race, and spirometers because they do. We zoom out from these particular devices to examine a wide range of tools and technologies, and we build a theoretical framework that covers not only race (...)
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  • Addressing Whiteness in Bioethics Curricula as Praxis for Transformation.Leslie E. Wolf & Aubrey DeVeny Incorvaia - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (3):36-38.
    In “Meeting the Moment: Bioethics in the Time of Black Lives Matter,” Camisha Russell calls for transforming “bioethics-as-usual” with help from “outsiders”. Prior scholars agree...
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  • Mediating difference: Normative conflict as opportunity.Ellen Waldman - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):25 – 27.
  • “Racialized Disablement” as a Key Heuristic for Addressing Racism in Bioethics.Desiree Valentine - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (3):24-26.
    Russell’s “Meeting the Moment: Bioethics in the Time of Black Lives Matter” expertly identifies how race and racism are matters of bioethical concern that ought to be addressed via an indivi...
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  • The Berlin wall.Howard Trachtman - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):13 – 14.
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  • Racism and Bioethics: Experiences and Reflections.John R. Stone - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4):13-15.
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  • Bioethics Skill Sets Can Work, But It Would Take Moral Courage to Apply Them and Get Desired Results.Stephen Sodeke - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4):19-21.
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  • Global Bioethics: A Story of Dreams and Doubts from Bengal.Bob Simpson - 2018 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 61 (2):215-229.
    This article is about the dream of a global bioethics. It touches upon some big issues concerning how progress in biomedicine and biotechnology might best be linked to justice and human flourishing in all parts of the world and not just in the global North. More specifically, however, it is about disappointment and regret when this dream is placed alongside the realities of living and working in a resource-poor setting in the global South. The essay focuses on a narrative account (...)
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  • A principled and cosmopolitan neuroethics: considerations for international relevance.John R. Shook & James Giordano - 2014 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 9:1.
    Neuroethics applies cognitive neuroscience for prescribing alterations to conceptions of self and society, and for prescriptively judging the ethical applications of neurotechnologies. Plentiful normative premises are available to ground such prescriptivity, however prescriptive neuroethics may remain fragmented by social conventions, cultural ideologies, and ethical theories. Herein we offer that an objectively principled neuroethics for international relevance requires a new meta-ethics: understanding how morality works, and how humans manage and improve morality, as objectively based on the brain and social sciences. This (...)
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  • Identifying racial privilege: Lessons from critical race theory and the law.Naomi Seiler - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):24 – 25.
  • Acknowledging the Burdens of ‘Blackness’.Nneka O. Sederstrom & Jada Wiggleton-Little - 2021 - HEC Forum 33 (1-2):19-33.
    The novel coronavirus of 2019 exposed, in an undeniable way, the severity of racial inequities in America’s healthcare system. As the urgency of the pandemic grew, administrators, clinicians, and ethicists became concerned with upholding the ethical principle of “most lives saved” by re-visiting crisis standards of care and triage protocols. Yet a colorblind, race-neutral approach to “most lives saved” is inherently inequitable because it reflects the normality and invisibility of ‘whiteness’ while simultaneously disregarding the burdens of ‘Blackness’. As written, the (...)
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  • Theorist as an Authentic Person.Nuriye Nalan Sahin-Hodoglugil - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):31-34.
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  • Questions of Race in Bioethics: Deceit, Disregard, Disparity, and the Work of Decentering.Camisha A. Russell - 2016 - Philosophy Compass 11 (1):43-55.
    Philosophers working in bioethics often hope to identify abstract principles and universal values to guide professional practice, relying on ideals of objectivity and impartiality, and on the power of rational (individual, autonomous) deliberation. Such a focus has made it difficult to address issues arising from group‐based, sociohistorical differences like race and ethnicity. This essay offers a survey of some of the major issues concerning race in the field of bioethics. These issues include a long history of racialized abuse in medical (...)
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  • Meeting the Moment: Bioethics in the Time of Black Lives Matter.Camisha Russell - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (3):9-21.
    In this article, I begin by describing what I call this Black Lives Matter moment in the US. I then offer three reasons for considering racism as a bioethical issue, the least discussed of which is...
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  • Kingdoms, priests and handmaidens: bioethics and its culture.Stephen Richards - 2022 - The New Bioethics 28 (2):152-167.
    Central to this essay is the understanding that varied communities may have an inherent and unrecognised culture of their own and this culture may be detrimental to their core. Bioethics constitutes one such community and is embedded in norms and values comprising its own culture. I use exclusion of religion or simply ‘irreligion’ as an example of a cultural element that may be established and so shape the culture of bioethics. Irreligious bioethics includes both overt religious preclusion and the more (...)
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  • Postcolonial Bioethics.Christy A. Rentmeester - 2012 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 21 (3):366-374.
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  • Postcolonial Bioethics.Christy A. Rentmeester - 2012 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 21 (3):366-374.
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  • A Response to Commentators on "Differences from Somewhere: The Normativity of Whiteness in Bioethics in the United States".Catherine Myser - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (3):56-62.
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  • Community-Based Participatory Research in United States Bioethics: Steps Toward More Democratic Theory and Policy.Catherine Myser - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (2):67-68.
  • Defining “Global Health Ethics”: Offering a Research Agenda for More Bioethics and Multidisciplinary Contributions—From the Global South and Beyond the Health Sciences—to Enrich Global Health and Global Health Ethics Initiatives.Catherine Myser - 2015 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (1):5-10.
    Some claim that “global health is public health” but most regard global health as a new field, rapidly emerging mostly at North American academic institutions . The term was first incorporated into University of California, San Francisco’s Institute for Global Health in 1999 and UCSF also inaugurated the first North American master of science in global health in 2009. Global health is commonly acknowledged to have historical precedents in tropical medicine and international health. All three fields are regarded as having (...)
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  • Race, Power, and COVID-19: A Call for Advocacy within Bioethics.Zamina Mithani, Jane Cooper & J. Wesley Boyd - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):11-18.
    Events in 2020 have sparked a reimagination of how both individuals and institutions should consider race, power, health, and marginalization in society. In a response to these developments, we exa...
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  • Playing in the dark: Whiteness and the bioethics imagination.Steven Miles - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):12.
  • Race, Reproduction, and Biopolitics: A Review Essay.Christopher Mayes - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 18 (1):99-107.
    This review essay critically examines Catherine Mills’s Biopolitics and Camisha Russell’s The Assisted Reproduction of Race. Although distinct works, the centrality of race and reproduction provides a point of connection and an opening into reframing contemporary debates within bioethics and biopolitics. In reviewing these books together I hope to show how biopolitical theory and critical philosophy of race can be useful in looking at bioethical problems from a new perspective that open up different kinds of analyses, especially around historically embedded (...)
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  • Lead Essay—Institutional Racism, Whiteness, and the Role of Critical Bioethics.Christopher Mayes, Yin Paradies & Amanuel Elias - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 18 (1):9-12.
    This paper discusses the ethical implications of racism and some of the various costs associated with racism occurring at the institutional level. We argue that, in many ways, the laws, social structures, and institutions in Western society have operated to perpetuate the continuation of historical legacies of racial inequities with or without the intention of individuals and groups in society. By merely maintaining existing structures, laws, and social norms, society can impose social, economic, and health costs on racial minorities that (...)
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  • Accounting for Culture in Globalized Bioethics.Patricia Marshall & Barbara Koenig - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):252-266.
    As we look to the future in a world with porous borders and boundaries transgressed by technologies, an inevitable question is:Can there be a single, global bioethics? Intimately intertwined with this question is a second one: How might a global bioethics account for profound - and constantly transforming - sources of cultural difference? Can a uniform, global bioethics be relevant cross-culturally? These are not simple questions, rather, a multi-dimensional answer is required. It is important to distinguish between two meanings of (...)
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  • Accounting for Culture in a Globalized Bioethics.Patricia Marshall & Barbara Koenig - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):252-266.
    As we look to the future in a world with porous borders and boundaries transgressed by technologies, an inevitable question is:Can there be a single, global bioethics? Intimately intertwined with this question is a second one: How might a global bioethics account for profound - and constantly transforming - sources of cultural difference? Can a uniform, global bioethics be relevant cross-culturally? These are not simple questions, rather, a multi-dimensional answer is required. It is important to distinguish between two meanings of (...)
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  • Materialized Oppression in Medical Tools and Technologies.Shen-yi Liao & Vanessa Carbonell - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4):9-23.
    It is well-known that racism is encoded into the social practices and institutions of medicine. Less well-known is that racism is encoded into the material artifacts of medicine. We argue that many medical devices are not merely biased, but materialize oppression. An oppressive device exhibits a harmful bias that reflects and perpetuates unjust power relations. Using pulse oximeters and spirometers as case studies, we show how medical devices can materialize oppression along various axes of social difference, including race, gender, class, (...)
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  • The Really New Jim Crow: Why Bioethicists Must Ally With Undocumented Immigrants.Mark Kuczewski - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4):21-23.
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  • Knowledge as power: The impact of normativity on epistemology.Deborah L. Kasman - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):20 – 22.
  • White normativity and subsequent critical race deconstruction of bioethics.Kari L. Karsjens & JoAnna M. Johnson - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):22 – 23.
  • Sources of normativity: How multicultural values emerge.Nancy S. Jecker - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):16 – 18.
  • Race, Racism, and Bioethics: Are We Stuck?Jennifer E. James - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (3):22-24.
    Camisha Russell has written a beautiful essay articulating why race and racism should be centered within bioethics. I agree with her assertion that Black Lives Matter (and the subsequent backlash t...
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  • Beyond Seeing Race: Centering Racism and Acknowledging Agency Within Bioethics.Jennifer E. James & Corina L. Iacopetti - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):56-58.
    As the twin pandemics of COVID-19 and state violence against Black Americans dominated our national landscape in the spring of 2020, many in medicine, nursing, and public health made renewed calls...
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  • Racism and Bioethics: Are We Part of the Problem?Anita Ho - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4):23-25.
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  • Why Bioethics Has a Race Problem.John Hoberman - 2016 - Hastings Center Report 46 (2):12-18.
    In the September-October 2001 issue of the Hastings Center Report, editor Gregory Kaebnick encouraged bioethicists to turn their attention toward “easily overlooked, relatively little-talked-about societal topics” such as race. In 2000 the president of the American Society for Bioethics had called for a more socially conscious bioethics. Race was risky territory, Kaebnick pointed out, but this challenge did not justify avoidance. Over the next fifteen years, the response to this editor's invitation to examine the racial dimensions of medicine in the (...)
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  • Continental Approaches in Bioethics.Melinda C. Hall - 2015 - Philosophy Compass 10 (3):161-172.
    Bioethics influences public policy, scientific research, and clinical practice. Thinkers in Continental traditions have increasingly contributed scholarship to this field, and their approaches allow new insights and alternative normative guidance. In this essay, examples of the following Continental approaches in bioethics are presented and considered: phenomenology and existentialism; deconstruction; Foucauldian methodologies; and biopolitical analyses. Also highlighted are Continental feminisms and the philosophy of disability. Continental approaches are importantly diverse, but those I focus upon here reveal embedded models of individualized autonomy (...)
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  • "Decolonizing" the minds of bioethicists: Reflections on psychosocial challenges.Sandra Anderson Garcia - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):27 – 29.
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  • On cattle and casseroles.Kelly Fryer-Edwards - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):55 – 56.
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  • Diversity in German-speaking medical ethics and humanities.Amelia Fiske & Stuart McLennan - 2022 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 19 (4):643-653.
    BackgroundBioethics can play an important role in addressing diversity both in and outside of academia, setting precedents for meaningful contributions to public discourse, research, teaching, training, and policy development. However, in order to do so, these conversations also need to reflect on the issue of diversity within the field of bioethics across the globe. This study aims to examine current gender representation and diversity at medical ethics and humanities institutes in Germany, the German-speaking areas of Switzerland, and Austria.MethodsA total of (...)
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  • How Materialized Oppression Contributes to Bioethics.Kadija Ferryman & J. Henry Brems - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4):1-5.
    Liao and Carbonell’s (2023) article, “Materialized Oppression in Medical Tools and Technologies” directs our attention, not to new cutting edge medical technologies, but to the pulse oximeter and t...
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  • The ethics of coercion in mental healthcare: the role of structural racism.Mirjam Faissner & Esther Braun - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    In mental health ethics, it is generally assumed that coercive measures are sometimes justified when persons with mental illness endanger themselves or others. Coercive measures are regarded as ethically justified only when certain criteria are fulfilled: for example, the intervention must be proportional in relation to the potential harm. In this paper, we demonstrate shortcomings of this established ethical framework in cases where people with mental illness experience structural racism. By drawing on a case example from mental healthcare, we first (...)
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  • Whiteness and difference in nursing.David G. Allen - 2006 - Nursing Philosophy 7 (2):65-78.
    This paper uses a semiotic, performative theory of language and post-colonial theory to argue that nursing's representations of ‘multiculturalism’ need to be grounded in a theory of whiteness, an historicized understanding of how ethnic/cultural differences come to be represented in the ways they are and informed by Foucault's notions of power/knowledge. Using nursing education and ‘cultural compentency’ as examples, the paper draws on a range of literatures to suggest more critical and politically productive ways of approaching difference from within nursing's (...)
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  • Bioethicists Can and Should Contribute to Addressing Racism.Marion Danis, Yolonda Wilson & Amina White - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4):3-12.
    The problems of racism and racially motivated violence in predominantly African American communities in the United States are complex, multifactorial, and historically rooted. While these problems are also deeply morally troubling, bioethicists have not contributed substantially to addressing them. Concern for justice has been one of the core commitments of bioethics. For this and other reasons, bioethicists should contribute to addressing these problems. We consider how bioethicists can offer meaningful contributions to the public discourse, research, teaching, training, policy development, and (...)
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  • Respect for cultural diversity in bioethics is an ethical imperative.Subrata Chattopadhyay & Raymond De Vries - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (4):639-645.
    The field of bioethics continues to struggle with the problem of cultural diversity: can universal principles guide ethical decision making, regardless of the culture in which those decisions take place? Or should bioethical principles be derived from the moral traditions of local cultures? Ten Have and Gordijn and Bracanovic defend the universalist position, arguing that respect for cultural diversity in matters ethical will lead to a dangerous cultural relativity where vulnerable patients and research subjects will be harmed. We challenge the (...)
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  • East meets West: Cross-cultural perspective in end-of-life decision making from Indian and German viewpoints. [REVIEW]Subrata Chattopadhyay & Alfred Simon - 2008 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 11 (2):165-174.
    Culture creates the context within which individuals experience life and comprehend moral meaning of illness, suffering and death. The ways the patient, family and the physician communicate and make decisions in the end-of-life care are profoundly influenced by culture. What is considered as right or wrong in the healthcare setting may depend on the socio-cultural context. The present article is intended to delve into the cross-cultural perspectives in ethical decision making in the end-of-life scenario. We attempt to address the dynamics (...)
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  • The Role of Emotion in Understanding Whiteness.Belinda Borell - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 18 (1):23-31.
    This paper argues that stoicism as a central element of whiteness shapes, controls, and ultimately limits the experience and expression of emotion in public space. I explore how this may play out in particular medical settings like hospitals in Aotearoa New Zealand. I argue that working in conjunction with other values of whiteness identified by Myser —hyper-individualism, a contractual view of relationships, and an emphasis on personal control and autonomy—this makes hospitals emotionally unsafe spaces for Māori and other groups who (...)
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  • On the Shoulders of Giants: A Reckoning with Social Justice.Elizabeth Bogdan-Lovis, Karen Kelly-Blake & Wendy Jiang - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):72-78.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S72-S78, March‐April 2022.
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  • Strange bedfellows? Reflections on bioethics' role in disaster response planning.Jessica Berg & Nicholas King - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (5):3 – 5.
    This essay considers the potential role of bioethics in disaster response planning and preparedness. Bioethicists can make substantial contributions, by ensuring that decision-making and distribution of resources during crises is carried out in a fair and just manner, as well as by examining the assumptions upon which disaster planning are based. Bioethicists should also be aware of potential pitfalls of overly-hasty engagement with this new field.
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  • Balkanizing bioethics.Robert Baker - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):13 – 14.
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  • A foreigner in my own country: Forgetting the heterogeneity of our national community.Julie M. Aultman - 2006 - American Journal of Bioethics 6 (2):56 – 59.
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