List of Contributors
Bioethical Issues, Sociological Perspectives
ISBN: 978-0-7623-1438-6, eISBN: 978-1-84950-501-7
ISSN: 1057-6290
Publication date: 11 December 2007
Citation
(2007), "List of Contributors", Katz Rothman, B., Mitchell Armstrong, E. and Tiger, R. (Ed.) Bioethical Issues, Sociological Perspectives (Advances in Medical Sociology, Vol. 9), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. ix-x. https://doi.org/10.1016/S1057-6290(07)09014-6
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
- List of Contributors
- Introductory Preface
- Part I: Placing Bioethics Historically
- Whose Body (Of Opinion) is it Anyway? Historicizing Tissue Ownership and Examining ‘Public Opinion’ in Bioethics
- From Cruzan
- The Changing Context of Neonatal Decision Making: are the Consumerist and Disability Rights Movements Having an Effect?
- Part II: The Sociology of a Working Bioethics: Private Narratives
- “What are We Really Doing Here?” Journeys into Hospital Ethics Committees in Germany: Nurses’ Participation and The(ir) Marginalization of Care
- Healthcare Ethics Committees Without Function? Locations and Forms of Ethical Speech in a ‘Society of Presents’
- Ethical Mindfulness: Narrative Analysis and Everyday Ethics in Health Care
- Making the Autonomous Client: How Genetic Counselors Construct Autonomous Subjects
- Part III: Macrosociological Perspectives: Bioethics in the Policy Arena
- “… But you Cannot Influence the Direction of your Thinking”: Guiding Self-Government in Bioethics Policy Discourse
- Cutting Risk: The Ethics of Male Circumcision, HIV Prevention, and Wellness
- Genomics, Gender and Genetic Capital: The Need for an Embodied Ethics of Reproduction
- Part IV: Re-Imagining Bioethics: Expanding the Borders of Bioethical Inquiry and Action
- What Does Justice have to do with It? A Bioethical and Sociological Perspective on the Diabetes Epidemic
- Sociological Contributions to Developing Ethical Standards for Medical Research in Very Poor Countries: The Example of Nepal
- Changing the Subject: Science, Subjectivity, and the Structuring of Ethical Implications