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OverviewThis third edition collection provides a contemporary survey of current international issues in bioethics and human rights for study across social science disciplines. New chapters discuss the reproductive justice in the US, immigration politics and medical duty during pandemics, climate change implications for bioethics, acoustic weaponry technologies, and vaccine politics. Following a consideration of theoretical frameworks, there three units on human rights, life and death, and public health form an in-depth look at contemporary issues in the field of bioethics. Each unit includes cutting edge analyses by international experts and thought-provoking case studies, as well as discussion and essay prompts, and Internet and film resources. Topics range from pediatric genomics, abortion (including the Dobbs decision, medical tourism, human experimentation, climate change, the Havana syndrome, the care of aging family members, truth-telling, vulnerable human subjects, health equity, healthcare in ICE detention facilities, solitary confinement, euthanasia, lethal injections and the harvesting of human organs, pandemic ethics, vaccine controversies, and more. The new, updated, and retained chapters make this book an appealing resource as a primary text, scholarly reference book, or a course supplement. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Wanda Teays , Alison Dundes RentelnPublisher: Rowman & Littlefield Imprint: Rowman & Littlefield Edition: Third Edition Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.744kg ISBN: 9781538188606ISBN 10: 1538188600 Pages: 438 Publication Date: 22 December 2023 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents*New or updated in this edition *Introduction PART I: Theoretical Perspectives 1. A Global Ethical Framework for Bioethics, Bernard Gert 2. The Compatibility of Universal Morality, Particular Moralities, and Multiculturalism, Tom L. Beauchamp 3. Culture and Ethical Aspects of Truth-Telling in a Value Pluralistic Society, Ilhan Ilkilic 4. Lost in Translation, Søren Holm *5. Issues in Global Health Ethics, Udo Schüklenk *6. Rights of Persons with Disabilities from a Global Perspective, Akiko Ito *Internet Resources *Discussion Topics PART II: Human Rights 7. Bioethics and Human Rights: A Historical Perspective, Robert Baker 8. Medical Tourism: Justice, Autonomy, and Power, Virginia L. Warren *9. Solitary Confinement, Wanda Teays *10. Compensation for Research Related Injury For A Typically Ignored Social Harm, Peter F. Omonzejele 11. Ethics of Aboriginal Research, Marlene Brant Castellano 12. The Human Rights Dimensions of Virginity Restoration Surgery, Alison Dundes Renteln *Internet Resources *Discussion Topics PART III: Life and Death 13. Pediatrics Genomics: Current Dilemmas and a Messy Future, Maya Sabatello *14. The Abortion Debate in the 21st Century and Substantive Due Process, Michael Boylan *15. The Future of Reproductive Justice in the United States After Dobbs, Kimberly Mutcherson 16. Euthanasia Could be a Medical Duty, Carlos Verdugo Serna 17. Is There a Global Bioethics? End of Life in Thailand and the Case for Local Difference, Scott Stonington and Pinit Ratanakul 18. Confucianism and Killing versus Letting Die, Cecilia Wee 19. Global versus Local: The Use of Lethal Injection in China, Cher Weixia Chen * Internet Resources *Discussion Topics PART IV: Public Health 20. A Bioethics for Global Mental Health, Zenon Culverhouse 21. Long-Term Care for Elderly People Globally: A Feminist Perspective, Rosemarie Tong *22. Reconsidering Acoustic Attacks, Alison Dundes Renteln *23. Climate Change and Bioethics, Peter Tagore Tan *24. Immigration Detention and the Right to Health Care in Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic, Rita Manning *25. Ethics in a Pandemic: A Rights-Centered Foundation, Edward H. Spence *26. Is There a Duty to Treat in a Pandemic?, Wanda Teays *27. Vaccine Nationalism and Equity: Bioethical Considerations, Bradley P. Stoner *Internet Resources *Discussion Topics APPENDICES *Appendix A. Essay Questions *Appendix B. Case Analysis Topics *Appendix C. Bioethics in Film Index About the ContributorsReviewsCombine authors from a Who's Who list in ethics with global issues that interest us all and you achieve this book. Well done! --Doris Schroeder, director, Centre for Professional Ethics, University of Central Lancashire This important collection takes a wide range of key ethical issues in global health and examines them in the context of human rights theory and practice. It could not be more useful or more timely. --Richard Ashcroft, professor of bioethics, City Law School, City, University of London Combine authors from a Who's Who list in ethics with global issues that interest us all and you achieve this book. Well done! --Doris Schroeder, director, Centre for Professional Ethics, University of Central Lancashire This important collection takes a wide range of key ethical issues in global health and examines them in the context of human rights theory and practice. It could not be more useful or more timely. --Richard Ashcroft, professor of bioethics, City Law School, City, University of London This new and timely edition of an emerging classical volume on bioethics and human rights meets most expectations. However, this new iteration does not replace, but rather complements, previous editions. While the book still includes well-crafted, fundamental pieces that both support and challenge the notion of global bioethics, epitomized by the unperishable trio of Gert, Beauchamp, and Holm, this edition includes several new articles that address previously missing questions and approach more voguish issues. Culture and truth-telling in medicine and the rights of persons with disabilities count among the former, while a number of COVID-related articles belong to the latter. As in previous editions, the book has further readings and materials, specific questions for discussion, essays, and representative cases for didactic exercises. For those who are interested in the timeless problems of biomedicine and human rights, this volume delivers, yet this reviewer recommends referencing previous editions as well. Readers who are seeking more recent problems in health care and human rights will welcome it, although many journals have already published similar materials. This edition will have a shorter shelf life than its predecessors, which is the fate of all timely publications. Recommended. Lower- and upper-division undergraduates, practitioners. -- ""Choice Reviews"" Combine authors from a Who's Who list in ethics with global issues that interest us all and you achieve this book. Well done! This important collection takes a wide range of key ethical issues in global health and examines them in the context of human rights theory and practice. It could not be more useful or more timely. Author InformationWanda Teays is professor of philosophy at Mount Saint Mary’s University, Los Angeles Alison Dundes Renteln is professor of political science at the University of Southern California. Together, Teays and Renteln have also edited The Ethical University: Transforming Higher Education. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |