Offshoring Science: The Promise and Perils of the Globalization of Clinical Trials

IRB: Ethics & Human Research 33 (1):18-20 (2011)
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Abstract

Research ethics is often said to have been born of scandal. Whether or not this is true of the field in general, it does seem to be the case for much of the literature on the ethics of international research. But in When Experiments Travel: Clinical Trials and the Global Search for Human Subjects, the anthropologist Adriana Petryna sets out to portray not scandal, but the routine offshoring of clinical trials. Through gripping interviews and detailed case studies, she follows the lifecycle of international research, tracing its connections to health systems, legal systems, and entitlement programs. She also provides a glimpse into the complex social relations on which the research process depends, allowing her reader to see the way the labor is divided, the responsibilities delegated, the risks shifted, and decisions with far-reaching social consequences shaped by a spectrum of market, regulatory, and cultural influences

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Alex John London
Carnegie Mellon University

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