Biotech and Justice: Catching up with the Real World Order

Hastings Center Report 33 (5):34-44 (2003)
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Abstract

Social policy questions in the U.S. are often framed in terms of individual rights, valorizing individual freedom and self‐determination. But this focus obscures the social and economic bases of health and disease. U.S. bioethics, as its counterparts in Africa and Asia have done, needs to restructure its philosophical framework and expand its moral criteria to consider how to define a global ethics.

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Bioethics, Theology, and Social Change.Lisa Sowle Cahill - 2003 - Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (3):363 - 398.

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