Results for 'Jennifer L. Freitag'

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  1. Four transgressive acclamations to end gender violence.Jennifer L. Freitag - 2018 - In Jennifer C. Dunn & Jimmie Manning (eds.), Transgressing feminist theory and discourse: advancing conversations across disciplines. New York: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group.
     
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  2.  94
    Variations in ethical intuitions.Jennifer L. Zamzow & Shaun Nichols - 2009 - Philosophical Issues 19 (1):368-388.
  3. Blame mitigation: A less tidy take and its philosophical implications.Jennifer L. Daigle & Joanna Demaree-Cotton - 2022 - Philosophical Psychology 35 (4):490-521.
    Why do we find agents less blameworthy when they face mitigating circumstances, and what does this show about philosophical theories of moral responsibility? We present novel evidence that the tendency to mitigate the blameworthiness of agents is driven both by the perception that they are less normatively competent—in particular, less able to know that what they are doing is wrong—and by the perception that their behavior is less attributable to their deep selves. Consequently, we argue that philosophers cannot rely on (...)
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  4.  42
    Critical discourse analysis for nursing research.Jennifer L. Smith - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (1):60-70.
    Critical discourse analysis is a useful and productive qualitative methodology but has been underutilized within nursing research. In order to redress this deficiency the research presented in this article represents an exploration of the way in which critical discourse analysis may be applied to the analysis of public debates around policy for nursing practice. In this article the author discusses the history of the application of critical discourse analysis and provides an example of its application to the debate around the (...)
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  5.  71
    Academic Integrity: The Relationship between Individual and Situational Factors on Misconduct Contemplations.Jennifer L. Kisamore, Thomas H. Stone & I. M. Jawahar - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 75 (4):381-394.
    Recent, well-publicized scandals, involving unethical conduct have rekindled interest in academic misconduct. Prior studies of academic misconduct have focussed exclusively on situational factors (e.g., integrity culture, honor codes), demographic variables or personality constructs. We contend that it is important to also examine how␣these classes of variables interact to influence perceptions of and intentions relating to academic misconduct. In a sample of 217 business students, we examined how integrity culture interacts with Prudence and Adjustment to explain variance in estimated frequency of (...)
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  6.  46
    Ethical Values and Long-term Orientation.Jennifer L. Nevins, William O. Bearden & Bruce Money - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 71 (3):261-274.
    Lapses in ethical conduct by those in corporate and public authority worldwide have given business researchers and practitioners alike cause to re-examine the antecedents to personal ethical values. We explore the relationship between ethical values and an individual’s long-term orientation or LTO, defined as the degree to which one plans for and considers the future, as well as values traditions of the past. Our study also examines the role of work ethic and conservative attitudes in the formation of a person’s (...)
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  7. Rules and Principles in Moral Decision Making: An Empirical Objection to Moral Particularism.Jennifer L. Zamzow - 2015 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 18 (1):123-134.
    It is commonly thought that moral rules and principles, such as ‘Keep your promises,’ ‘Respect autonomy,’ and ‘Distribute goods according to need ,’ should play an essential role in our moral deliberation. Particularists have challenged this view by arguing that principled guidance leads us to engage in worse decision making because principled guidance is too rigid and it leads individuals to neglect or distort relevant details. However, when we examine empirical literature on the use of rules and principles in other (...)
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  8.  58
    Middle Childhood and Modern Human Origins.Jennifer L. Thompson & Andrew J. Nelson - 2011 - Human Nature 22 (3):249-280.
    The evolution of modern human life history has involved substantial changes in the overall length of the subadult period, the introduction of a novel early childhood stage, and many changes in the initiation, termination, and character of the other stages. The fossil record is explored for evidence of this evolutionary process, with a special emphasis on middle childhood, which many argue is equivalent to the juvenile stage of African apes. Although the “juvenile” and “middle childhood” stages appear to be the (...)
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  9.  30
    Ethics and chronic disease: Where are the bioethicists?Jennifer L. Gibson & Ross E. G. Upshur - 2012 - Bioethics 26 (5):ii-iv.
  10. Agnotology: Ignorance and Absence or Towards a Sociology of Things That Aren’t There.Jennifer L. Croissant - 2014 - Social Epistemology 28 (1):4-25.
  11.  32
    The Invisibility of Asian Americans in COVID-19 Data, Reporting, and Relief.Jennifer L. Young & Mildred K. Cho - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (3):100-102.
    Without proper recognition of the dual pandemics of COVID-19 and racism that Asian Americans and other racial minorities in the United States are facing, we cannot successfully address structural b...
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  12.  15
    Teaching the nature of inquiry: Further developments in a high school genetics curriculum.Jennifer L. Cartier & Jim Stewart - 2000 - Science & Education 9 (3):247-267.
  13.  23
    The Nature, Measurement and Nomological Network of Environmentally Specific Transformational Leadership.Jennifer L. Robertson - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 151 (4):961-975.
    Previous research reveals that when leaders enact environmentally specific transformational leadership, they positively affect corporate environmental responsibility. While this research provides important insights into how leaders create and shape corporate environmental responsibility, confidence in the validity of these findings is limited because the psychometric properties of the measurement of environmentally specific transformational leadership has not yet been assessed. The goal of the current research was to develop and validate a measure of environmentally specific transformational leadership. To this end, four studies (...)
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  14.  64
    Banal Evil and Useless Knowledge: Hannah Arendt and Charlotte Delbo on Evil after the Holocaust.Jennifer L. Geddes - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):104-115.
    Hannah Arendt's and Charlotte Delbo's writings about the Holocaust trouble our preconceptions about those who do evil and those who suffer evil. Their jarring terms “banal evil” and “useless knowledge” point to limitations and temptations facing scholars of evil. While Arendt helps us to resist the temptation to mythologize evil, Delbo helps us to resist the temptation to domesticate suffering.
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  15.  16
    What does social studies inquiry look like? Novice negotiations of inquiry-centered practices through video reflection.Jennifer L. Gallagher & Christina M. Tschida - 2022 - Journal of Social Studies Research 46 (3):265-278.
    This paper shares findings of a qualitative project exploring teacher candidates’ reflections on their own social studies inquiry teaching using video capture and annotation technology (VCAT). Teacher candidates’ annotated video and written reflections were collected and analyzed. Findings include important understandings of teacher candidates’ scholarship-aligned recognitions of strengths and areas for growth as well as areas where they had underdeveloped or novice negotiated conceptions of inquiry-centered instruction.
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  16.  6
    Food Marketing to — and Research on — Children: New Directions for Regulation in the United States.Jennifer L. Pomeranz & Dariush Mozaffarian - 2022 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 50 (3):542-550.
    As countries around the world work to restrict unhealthy food and beverage marketing to children, the U.S. remains reliant on industry-self regulation. The First Amendment’s protection for commercial speech and previous gutting of the Federal Trade Commission’s authority pose barriers to restricting food marketing to children. However, false, unfair, and deceptive acts and practices remain subject to regulation and provide an avenue to address marketing to young children, modern practices that have evaded regulation, and gaps in the food and beverage (...)
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  17.  10
    Becoming a Candidate: Political Ambition and the Decision to Run for Office.Jennifer L. Lawless - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    Becoming a Candidate: Political Ambition and the Decision to Run for Office explores the factors that drive political ambition at the earliest stages. Using data from a comprehensive survey of thousands of eligible candidates, Jennifer L. Lawless systematically investigates what compels certain citizens to pursue elective positions and others to recoil at the notion. Lawless assesses personal factors, such as race, gender and family dynamics, that affect an eligible candidate's likelihood of considering a run for office. She also focuses (...)
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  18.  1
    Sadness and fear, but not happiness, motivate inhibitory behaviour: the influence of discrete emotions on the executive function of inhibition.Justin Storbeck, Jennifer L. Stewart & Jordan Wylie - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    Inhibition, an executive function, is critical for achieving goals that require suppressing unwanted behaviours, thoughts, or distractions. One hypothesis of the emotion and goal compatibility theory is that emotions of sadness and fear enhance inhibitory control. Across Experiments 1–4, we tested this hypothesis by inducing a happy, sad, fearful, and neutral emotional state prior to completing an inhibition task that indexed a specific facet of inhibition (oculomotor, resisting interference, behavioural, and cognitive). In Experiment 4, we included an anger induction to (...)
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  19.  12
    Reading as Evocation: Engaging the Novel in Phenomenological Psychology.Jennifer L. Schulz - 2012 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 12 (sup2):1-9.
    Literary fiction gives us a window into ourselves and into those who may seem most unfamiliar to us. We therefore have a moral imperative to read, just as, as psychotherapists, we have a moral imperative to listen. Literary study teaches us to read closely, to listen for structure as well as content, and it also instructs us about different ways of paying attention. Inversely, because the practice of psychotherapy values connection and process, rather than simply interpretation, it shows us how (...)
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  20.  52
    Search, rest, and grace in Pascal.Jennifer L. Soerensen - 2014 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 76 (1):19-40.
    For Pascal, how are human beings related, or how do they relate themselves, to the summum bonum in this life? In what sense do they share in it, and how do they come to share in it? These are questions that emerge in many ways in Pascal’s writing, significantly in his concept of repos. To answer these questions, especially by elucidating what repos is for human beings in this life, I would like to begin with Graeme Hunter’s “Motion and Rest (...)
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  21.  31
    Creating the World’s Deadliest Catch: The Process of Enrolling Stakeholders in an Uncertain Endeavor.Jennifer L. Woolley, Susan L. Young & Sharon A. Alvarez - 2020 - Business and Society 59 (2):287-321.
    There is growing interest in the processes by which entrepreneurial opportunities are cocreated between entrepreneurs and their stakeholders. The longitudinal case study of de novo firm Wakefield Seafoods seeks to understand the underlying dynamics of phenomena that play out over time as stakeholders emerge and their contributions become essential to the opportunity formation process. The king crab data show that under conditions of uncertainty, characterized by incomplete or missing knowledge, entrepreneurial processes of experimentation, failure, and learning were effective in forming (...)
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  22. The politics of the estranged poor.Jennifer L. Hochschild - 1991 - Ethics 101 (3):560-578.
  23.  38
    The Cycle of Violence and Feminist Constructions of Selfhood.Jennifer L. Rike - 1996 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 3 (1):21-42.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Cycle of Violence and Feminist Constructions of Selfhood Jennifer L. Rike University ofDetroit Mercy Violence is the heart and secret soul ofthe sacred" (Girard 1977, 31). René Girard reaches this shocking conclusion by tracing the dynamics ofthe generation ofviolence in history, and the ingenious ways in which humanity has learned to funnel violence into ritual sacrifice to avoid apocalypse. His argument pivots upon his understanding ofhumanity as (...)
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  24.  22
    Television Food Marketing to Children Revisited: The Federal Trade Commission Has the Constitutional and Statutory Authority to Regulate.Jennifer L. Pomeranz - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (1):98-116.
    In response to the obesity epidemic, much discussion in the public health and child advocacy communities has centered on restricting food and beverage marketing practices directed at children. A common retort to appeals for government regulation is that such advertising and marketing constitutes protected commercial speech under the First Amendment. This perception has allowed the industry to function largely unregulated since the Federal Trade Commission 's foray into the topic, termed KidVid, was terminated by an act of Congress in 1981. (...)
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  25. Rhetorical roots and media future: How podcasting fits into the computers and writing classroom.Jennifer L. Bowie - forthcoming - Topoi.
     
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  26.  29
    Should the Mass Public Follow Elite Opinion? It Depends ….Jennifer L. Hochschild - 2012 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 24 (4):527-543.
    John Zaller's finding that members of the public usually follow elites' cues may seem normatively disturbing. If true, it might be taken to obviate the need for democracy or to show that elites are manipulating the public. However, as long as the public sometimes fails to follow elites, we can judge cases of public followership according to independent criteria, such as whether the public's occasional rebellions against elite opinion further liberal-democratic or utilitarian purposes. A review of some prominent cases of (...)
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  27.  65
    Television Food Marketing to Children Revisited: The Federal Trade Commission Has the Constitutional and Statutory Authority to Regulate.Jennifer L. Pomeranz - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (1):98-116.
    The evidence reveals that young children are targeted by food and beverage advertisers but are unable to comprehend the commercial context and persuasive intent of marketing. Although the First Amendment protects commercial speech, it does not protect deceptive and misleading speech for profit. Marketing directed at children may fall into this category of unprotected speech. Further, children do not have the same First Amendment right to receive speech as adults. For the first time since the Federal Trade Commission's original attempt (...)
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  28.  37
    Improving Laws and Legal Authorities for Obesity Prevention and Control.Jennifer L. Pomeranz & Lawrence O. Gostin - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (s1):62-75.
    This paper is one of four interrelated action papers resulting from the 2008 National Summit on Legal Preparedness for Obesity Prevention and Control. Summit participants engaged in discussions on the current state of the law with respect to obesity, nutrition and food policy, physical activity, and physical education. Participants also identified gaps in the law at all jurisdictional levels and relevant to numerous sectors and disciplines that have a stake in obesity prevention and control.The companion paper, “Assessment of Laws and (...)
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  29.  15
    Clinical Trials Registries: A Reform That is Past Due.Jennifer L. Gold & David M. Studdert - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):811-820.
    Several high-profile episodes have recently thrust drug safety and the pharmaceutical industry's practices into the spotlight. Merck's recall of the drug Vioxx, for instance, was a major news event. GlaxoSmithKline's suppression of data linking suicidal behavior among children to Paxil also galvanized tremendous public attention. What differentiates these events from the usual evolving process of scientific knowledge, and marks them with an aura of “scandal,” are questions about the propriety of corporate behavior. Who knew what, and when did they know (...)
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  30.  11
    Philosophers and the Holocaust.Jennifer L. Eagan - 1997 - International Studies in Philosophy 29 (1):9-17.
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  31.  21
    Improving Laws and Legal Authorities for Obesity Prevention and Control.Jennifer L. Pomeranz & Lawrence O. Gostin - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (s1):62-75.
    This paper is one of four interrelated action papers resulting from the 2008 National Summit on Legal Preparedness for Obesity Prevention and Control. Summit participants engaged in discussions on the current state of the law with respect to obesity, nutrition and food policy, physical activity, and physical education. Participants also identified gaps in the law at all jurisdictional levels and relevant to numerous sectors and disciplines that have a stake in obesity prevention and control.The companion paper, “Assessment of Laws and (...)
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  32.  15
    In the Face of a Haitian Child: Racial Intimacies, Paternalistic Interventions, and Discourses of “Deviant Black Motherhood” in Transnational Hispaniola.Jennifer L. Shoaff - 2017 - Feminist Studies 43 (2):438.
    Abstract:In the immediate aftermath of the Haitian earthquake on January 12, 2010, the representative victim-survivor in multiple media sites appeared to the world in the face of the Haitian child-cum-orphan. This poignant image of loss and suffering lent urgency to a range of altruistic responses—or rather, paternalistic interventions—by white families in the U.S. I argue that in both narrative and practice, dominant constructions of normative (white) motherhood were exaggerated and made hypervisible, which propelled the actual lived experience of Haitian mothers (...)
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  33. Banal evil and useless knowledge: Hannah Arendt and Charlotte delbo on evil after the holocaust.Jennifer L. Geddes - 2003 - Hypatia 18 (1):104-115.
    : Hannah Arendt's and Charlotte Delbo's writings about the Holocaust trouble our preconceptions about those who do evil and those who suffer evil. Their jarring terms "banal evil" and "useless knowledge" point to limitations and temptations facing scholars of evil. While Arendt helps us to resist the temptation to mythologize evil, Delbo helps us to resist the temptation to domesticate suffering.
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  34. Evil.Jennifer L. Geddes - 2013 - In Nicholas Adams, George Pattison & Graham Ward (eds.), The Oxford handbook of theology and modern European thought. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
     
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  35.  18
    Hannah Arendt and human rights: The predicament of common responsibility. By Peg Birmingham.Jennifer L. Geddes - 2009 - Hypatia 24 (1):208-211.
  36. Nancy J. Holland and Patricia Huntington, eds., Feminist Interpretations of Martin Heidegger Reviewed by.Jennifer L. Eagan - 2002 - Philosophy in Review 22 (5):328-330.
     
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  37.  11
    Conflict over Conflicts of Interest: An Analysis of the New NIH Rules.Jennifer L. Gold - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (1):105-110.
    Increasing reports of financial entanglements involving scientist and industry have led some to question the neutrality of research results. In December 2003, a story in the Los Angeles Times shocked readers by exposing several cases of NIH scientists embroiled in serious financial conflicts of interest.1 It was revealed, for example, that senior NIH official Stephen Katz was a paid consultant to Schering AG, a German pharmaceutical company with which he was involved in conducting clinical trials. In a similar case, John (...)
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  38.  10
    Obsessional Modernity: The "Institutionalization of Doubt".Jennifer L. Fleissner - 2007 - Critical Inquiry 34 (1):106.
  39.  27
    Are There Real Rules for Adding?Jennifer L. Woodrow - 2010 - Dialogue 49 (3):455-477.
    RÉSUMÉ : J’affirme que les normes sémantiques, y compris les normes mathématiques pour l’addition, sont réelles. Ces normes sont régies par des pratiques sociales d’attribuer aux autres et d’entreprendre soi-même la signification, et cet aspect sociale obscurci l’objectivité des normes. L’attribution par Kripke d’un paradoxe sceptique, quant à la possibilité de suivre une règle, relève d’une conception de la normativité selon laquelle les pratiques sociales sont insuffisantes pour autoriser les normes sémantiques. Or, une conception de la normativité qui prend comme (...)
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  40.  17
    Is Variation in Resident-Centered Care and Quality Performance Related to Health System Factors in Veterans Health Administration Nursing Homes?Jennifer L. Sullivan, Ryann L. Engle, Denise Tyler, Melissa K. Afable, Katelyn Gormley, Michael Shwartz, Omonyêlé Adjognon & Victoria A. Parker - 2018 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 55:004695801878703.
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  41.  19
    There Are 2 Sexes: Essays in Feminology by Antoinette Fouque.Jennifer L. Sweatman - 2017 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 7 (2):383-388.
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  42.  24
    Sex Work, Heroin Injection, and HIV Risk in Tijuana: A Love Story.Jennifer L. Syvertsen & Angela Robertson Bazzi - 2015 - Anthropology of Consciousness 26 (2):182-194.
    The relationships between female sex workers and their noncommercial male partners are typically viewed as sites of HIV risk rather than meaningful unions. This ethnographic case study presents a nuanced portrayal of the relationship between Cindy and Beto, a female sex worker who injects drugs and her intimate, noncommercial partner who live in Tijuana, Mexico. On the basis of ethnographic research in Tijuana and our long-term involvement in a public health study, we suggest that emotions play a central role in (...)
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  43.  18
    Conceptualizing and evaluating replication across domains of behavioral research.Jennifer L. Tackett & Blakeley B. McShane - 2018 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41:e152.
    We discuss the authors' conceptualization of replication, in particular the false dichotomy of direct versus conceptual replication intrinsic to it, and suggest a broader one that better generalizes to other domains of psychological research. We also discuss their approach to the evaluation of replication results and suggest moving beyond their dichotomous statistical paradigms and employing hierarchical/meta-analytic statistical models.
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  44.  16
    The Social Cost of International Investment Agreements: The Case of Cigarette Packaging.Jennifer L. Tobin - 2018 - Ethics and International Affairs 32 (2):153-167.
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  45.  41
    “Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust”: Children and Young Adults in the Anti-Abortion Movement.Jennifer L. Holland - 2020 - Feminist Studies 46 (1):74.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:74 Feminist Studies 46, no. 1. © 2020 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Jennifer L. Holland “Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust”: Children and Young Adults in the Anti-Abortion Movement During the last three decades of the twentieth century, children across the United States regularly encountered adults who both hailed them as survivors of a holocaust and pleaded with them not to perpetrate one. These adults were not talking about (...)
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  46.  22
    Judging the events of our time.Jennifer L. Culbert - 2010 - In Roger Berkowitz (ed.), Thinking in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics. New York: Fordham University Press.
    This chapter recalls not only what Arendt says about judgment, but also of how she herself goes about judgment by revisiting her judgment of Adolf Eichmann and his trial. By calling attention to the theatrical quality of the Israeli House of Justice and the trial staged there, Arendt subtly underlines a claim she makes at the beginning of Eichmann in Jerusalem, a claim that is not often considered by critics but one that introduces an argument for which Arendt's account of (...)
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  47.  31
    The Consolation of Unsettling Accounts.Jennifer L. Culbert - 2009 - Theory and Event 12 (1).
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  48.  20
    Clinical Trials Registries: A Reform that is Past Due.Jennifer L. Gold & David M. Studdert - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (4):811-820.
    Several high-profile episodes have recently thrust drug safety and the pharmaceutical industry's practices into the spotlight. Merck's recall of the drug Vioxx, for instance, was a major news event. GlaxoSmithKline's suppression of data linking suicidal behavior among children to Paxil also galvanized tremendous public attention. What differentiates these events from the usual evolving process of scientific knowledge, and marks them with an aura of “scandal,” are questions about the propriety of corporate behavior. Who knew what, and when did they know (...)
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  49. Do White Women Gain Status for Engaging in Anti-black Racism at Work? An Experimental Examination of Status Conferral.Jennifer L. Berdahl & Barnini Bhattacharyya - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-20.
    Businesses often attempt to demonstrate their commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) by showcasing women in their leadership ranks, most of whom are white. Yet research has shown that organizations confer status and power to women who engage in sexist behavior, which undermines DEI efforts. We sought to examine whether women who engage in racist behavior are also conferred relative status at work. Drawing on theory and research on organizational culture and intersectionality, we predicted that a white woman who (...)
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  50.  30
    Why Still Kill?Jennifer L. Culbert - 2004 - Political Theory 32 (4):563-569.
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