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  1. Ethics in nursing: A systematic review of the framework of evidence perspective.Erman Yıldız - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (4):1128-1148.
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  • Nurses, industrial action and ethics: Considerations from the 2010 South African public-sector strike.André J. Van Rensburg & Dingie Janse van Rensburg - 2013 - Nursing Ethics 20 (7):0969733012473771.
    Several important ethical dilemmas emerge when nurses join a public-sector strike. Such industrial action is commonplace in South Africa and was most notably illustrated by a national wage negotiation in 2010. Media coverage of the proceedings suggested unethical behaviour on the part of nurses, and further exploration is merited. Laws, policies and provisional codes are meant to guide nurses’ behaviour during industrial action, while ethical theories can be used to further illuminate the role of nurses in industrial action. There are, (...)
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  • Healthcare strikes and the ethics of voting in ballots.Ben Saunders - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    There has been much discussion of the justifiability of strikes by healthcare workers, but comparatively little discussion of the political processes through which strikes occur. This article focuses on the Trade Union Act 2016, which currently governs strike ballots in the UK. This legislation has important implications for healthcare workers being balloted on strikes (or other forms of industrial action). The article first explains the legal requirements for a strike mandate and illustrates how votes in strike ballots can be counterproductive, (...)
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  • Are strikes extortionate?Ned Dobos - 2021 - Philosophical Studies 179 (1):245-264.
    Workers who go on strike are sometimes accused of holding their employer “to ransom”, the implication being that strike action is a kind of extortion. The paper provides an analytical reconstruction of this objection, before presenting and interrogating different strategies for countering it. The first says that work-stoppages can only be extortionate if they infringe an employer’s rightful claim to productive labour, but that no employer has any such claim under capitalism. The second says that work-stoppages cannot be extortionate because, (...)
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