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The Oxford Handbook of Bioethics
Edited by Bonnie Steinbock
768 pages
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246x171mm
978-0-19-956241-1
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Paperback
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12 February 2009
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- The most controversial and fast-moving area of academic research
- Broad, lucid, and authoritative coverage of the issues
- Genuinely interdisciplinary
- This will be the standard reference point for these debates
Bonnie Steinbock presents The Oxford Handbook of Bioethics - an authoritative, state-of-the-art guide to current issues in bioethics.
Thirty-four contributors reflect the interdisciplinarity that is characteristic of bioethics, and its increasingly international character. Thirty topics are covered in original essays written by some of the world's leading figures in the field, as well as by some newer 'up-and-comers'. The essays address both perennial issues, such as the methodology of bioethics, autonomy, justice, death, and moral status, and newer issues, such as biobanking, stem cell research, cloning, pharmacogenomics, and bioterrorism. Other topics concern mental illness and moral agency, the rule of double effect, justice and
the elderly, the definition of death, organ transplantation, feminist approaches to commodification of the body, life extension, advance directives, physician-assisted death, abortion, genetic research, population screening, enhancement, research ethics, and the implications of public and global health for bioethics.
Anyone who wants to know how the central debates in bioethics have developed in recent years, and where the debates are going, will want to consult this book. It will be an invaluable resource not only for scholars and graduate students in bioethics, but also for those in philosophy, medicine, law, theology, social science, public policy, and public health who wish to keep abreast of developments in
bioethics.Readership: Scholars and students of bioethics, medical ethics, and philosophy; healthcare professionals; lawyers, theologians, and social scientists working on issues to do with life and health; public policy and public health professionals.
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Edited by Bonnie Steinbock, University at Albany, State University of New York Contributors: John Arras, University of Virginia and Hastings Center Andrea Bonnicksen, Northern Illinois University Allen Buchanan, Duke University James Childress, University of Virginia John K. Davis, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Matthew DeCamp, Duke University Gerald Dworkin, University of California at Davis Ezekiel J. Emanuel, Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health and Hastings Center John Harris, University of Manchester, UK Academy of Medical Sciences,
and UK Human Genetics Commission Søren Holm, Cardiff Law School, Cardiff Centre for Ethics, Law and Society, and University of Oslo. Louise Irving, formerly University of Manchester Bruce Jennings, Center for Humans and Nature, Hastings Center, and Yale University Eric Juengst, Case Western Reserve University, Hastings Center, and the UCLA Center for Genetics and Society Jeffrey Kahn, University of Minnesota Jason Karlawish, University of Pennsylvania Jeanette Kennett, Australian National University and Monash University Benjamin J. Krohmal, Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health Alex John London, Carnegie Mellon University Florencia Luna, National Scientific and
Technological Research Council, Argentina, and Latin American University of Social Sciences Ruth Macklin, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York Don Marquis, University of Kansas Anna Mastroianni, University of Washington Dennis McKerlie, University of Calgary Carolyn McLeod, University of Western Ontario Jonathan Moreno, University of Virginia Ronald Munson, University of Missouri-St. Louis Thomas Murray, Hastings Center Felicia Nimue Ackerman, Brown University Alastair Norcross, Rice University Stephen Post, Case Western Reserve University Julian Savulescu, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford Bonnie
Steinbock, University at Albany/SUNY Daniel Sulmasy, St. Vincent's Hospital-Manhattan, and Bioethics Institute of New York Medical College Stuart Youngner, Case Western Reserve University
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"This volume from Oxford University Press, edited by philosopher Bonnie Steinbock, is an excellent resource for those who want to delve deeper into philosophical issues raised by the concerns of bioethics." - David B. Fletcher, Themelios "...the Oxford Handbook of Bioethics is an impressive and stimulating collection of original essays on some of the deepest and most challenging ethical issues in how we maintain, restore and enhance human health." - Annette Rid Medicine Health Care and Philosophy
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Part 1: Theoretical and Methodological Issues
1: James Childress: Methods in Bioethics
2: John Arras: The Way We Reason Now: Reflective Equilibrium in Bioethics
3: Bruce Jennings: Autonomy
4: Jeanette Kennett: Mental Disorder, Moral Agency, and the Self
5: Daniel Sulmasy: 'Reinventing' the Rule of Double Effect
Part 2: Justice and Policy
6: Søren Holm: Policy-Making in Pluralistic Societies
7: Benjamin J. Krohmal and Ezekiel J. Emanuel: Tiers Without Tears: The Ethics of a Two-Tiered Health Care System
8: Dennis McKerlie: Justice and the Elderly
Part 3: Bodies and Bodily Parts
9: Ronald Munson: Organ Transplantation
10: John Harris and Louise Irving: Biobanking
11: Carolyn McLeod: For Dignity or Money: Feminists on the Commodification of Women's Reproductive Labour
Part 4: The End of Life
12: Stuart Youngner: The Definition of Death
13: Stephen Post: The Aging Society and the Expansion of Senility: Biotechnological and Treatment Goals
14: Felicia Nimue Ackerman: Death is a Punch in the Jaw: Life-Extension and its Discontents
15: John K. Davis: Precedent Autonomy, Advance Directives, and End-of-Life Care
16: Gerald Dworkin: Physician-Assisted Death: The State of the Debate
Part 5: Reproduction and Cloning
17: Don Marquis: Abortion Revisited
18: Bonnie Steinbock: Moral Status, Moral Value, and Human Embryos: Implications for Stem Cell Research
19: Andrea Bonnicksen: Therapeutic Cloning: Politics and Policy
Part 6: Genetics and Enhancement
20: Eric Juengst: Population Genetic Research and Screening: Conceptual and Ethical Issues
21: Thomas Murray: Enhancement
22: Julian Savulescu: Genetic Interventions and the Ethics of Enhancement of Human Beings
23: Matthew DeCamp and Allen Buchanan: Pharmacogenomics: Ethical and regulatory issues
Part 7: Research Ethics
24: Alex John London: Clinical Equipoise: Foundational Requirement or Fundamental Error
25: Jason Karlawish: Research on Cognitively Impaired Adults
26: Florencia Luna: Research in Developing Countries
27: Alastair Norcross: Animal Experimentation
Part 8: Public and Global Health
28: Jeffrey Kahn and Anna Mastroianni: The Implications of Public Health for Bioethics
29: Ruth Macklin: Global Health
30: Jonathan Moreno: Bioethics and Bioterrorism
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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