Lexington Books
Pages: 162
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2796-4 • Hardback • March 2010 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-2797-1 • Paperback • March 2010 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-4729-0 • eBook • July 2012 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Donald O. Granberg is professor emeritus of sociology at University of Missouri-Columbia John F. Galliher is professor of sociology and director of peace studies at University of Missouri-Columbia.
Chapter 1. Granberg and Galliher Find their Way into Ethical Issues
Chapter 2. Stanley Milgram's Behavioral Study of Obedience
Chapter 3. Philip Zimbardo's Prison Simulation Study
Chapter 4. David Rosenhan's Pseudo-patient Study of Psychiatric Hospitals
Chapter 5. The Short, Tumultuous Career of Project Camelot
Chapter 6. Laud Humphreys and Tearoom Trade: A Pioneering Study of Male Homosexuality
Chapter 7. The Strange Career of Cyril Burt
Chapter 8. Cyril Burt and Margaret Mead: The Conflict Between Biological Determinants and Cultural Determinants
Chapter 9. Once a Rising Star: The Rise and Fall of Karen Ruggiero
Chapter 10. Plagiarism by Thin Editing
Chapter 11. Plagiarism and "Punishment" Texas A&M Style: Victim Blaming and Golden Parachutes
Chapter 12. Controversy over Five Dimensions of Religiosity
Chapter 13. The Clark-Hatfield Study of Gender Differences in Receptivity to Sexual Offers
Chapter 14. Allegations of Homosexual Arousal
Chapter 15. An Interference with Breathing Study
Chapter 16. Simulated Crash Landing
Chapter 17. Henry Murray Directs Verbal Attacks on Harvard University Undergraduates
Chapter 18. Putney and Cadwaller's Simulation of the Beginning of A Nuclear War
Chapter 19. Recent Adventures in Crime Fighting
Chapter 20. Conclusions
A Most Human Enterprise is an exceptional academic work that combines historical data and personal narrative in creative and meaningful ways.
— Larry W. Koch, University of Michigan in Flint
Granberg & Galliher have written an ethics casebook with detail and verve. They have chosen the famous as well as the more typical examples of ethical dilemmas in the social sciences, and highlighted the critical issues. Because ethical dilemmas have no easy answers, the authors take care to report both sides of the issues. It has the most complete and fair account of the Karen Ruggiero case I have read. This book is a quick read, with compelling tales of misconduct, misadventure, and missed opportunities. It provides an ideal starting point for investigation and discussion of the conduct of research in the social sciences...
— The University of Kansas, Chris Crandall, The University of Kansas
Granberg & Galliher have written an ethics casebook with detail and verve. They have chosen the famous as well as the more typical examples of ethical dilemmas in the social sciences, and highlighted the critical issues. Because ethical dilemmas have no easy answers, the authors take care to report both sides of the issues. It has the most complete and fair account of the Karen Ruggiero case I have read. This book is a quick read, with compelling tales of misconduct, misadventure, and missed opportunities. It provides an ideal starting point for investigation and discussion of the conduct of research in the social sciences.
— The University of Kansas, Chris Crandall, The University of Kansas
Two senior academic sociologists (both, Univ. of Missouri-Columbia) review the most interesting and influential cases of professional ethical failures and controversial research practices from the 1930s to the present. The stories are fascinating and related in an easy conversational style with a wealth of background information and a minimum of interpretation. Even when writing about classic cases, such as the Tuskegee Syphilis Study or the Milgram obedience studies, the authors add contextual details that will be unfamiliar to most readers and can greatly enhance one's teaching of the subject....Summing Up: Recommended
— Choice Reviews