Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 272
Trim: 7 x 9
978-0-7425-3278-6 • Hardback • October 2004 • $151.00 • (£117.00)
978-0-7425-3279-3 • Paperback • October 2004 • $59.00 • (£45.00)
Rosemarie Tong is Distinguished Professor of Health Care Ethics and director for professional and applied ethics at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte. She is also adjunct professor in the Department of Health Behavior and Administration and adjunct professor in the doctoral program in public policy. Anne Donchin is professor emerita of philosophy at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis. She is also adjunct professor of women's studies, professor of philanthropic studies, and adjunct professor of medical humanities. Susan Dodds is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Wollongong in Australia.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Integrating Global and Local Perspectives
Part 2 Part I: Exploring Affinities between Feminist Bioethics and Human Rights
Chapter 3 What Feminism Can Teach Global Ethics
Chapter 4 Integrating Bioethics and Human Rights: Toward a Global Feminist Approach
Chapter 5 Bioethics, Difference, and Rights
Chapter 6 Feminist Bioethics and the Language of Human Rights in the Chinese Context
Chapter 8 Feminist Perspectives, Global Bioethics, and the Need for Moral Language Translation Skills
Chapter 9 On Learning How to Care Appropriately: A Case for Developing a Model of Support to Those in Need
Part 9 Part II: Contextualizing Reproduction: Particular Perspectives
Chapter 10 Feminist Bioethics and Reproductive Rights of Women in India: Myth and Reality
Chapter 11 Globalizing Reproductive Control: The Consequences of the "Global Gag Rule"
Chapter 13 A Boy or a Girl: Is Any Choice Moral? The Ethics of Sex Selection and Sex Preselection in Context
Chapter 14 Right-Making and Wrong-Making in Surrogate Motherhood: A Confucian Feminist Perspective
Part 14 Part III: Righting Genetic Wrongs: Restoring Relationships
Chapter 15 Patents on Genetic Material: A New Originary Accumulation
Chapter 16 Genetic Restitution? DNA, Compensation, and Biological Families
Part 17 Part IV: Viewing HIV Policies through a Human Rights Framework
Chapter 19 Global Migrants, Gendered Tradition, and Human Rights: Black Africans and HIV in the United Kingdom
Chapter 19 HIV/AIDS Policies: Compromising the Human Rights of Women
Another FAB feast! This collection of thought-provoking essays advances feminist bioethics—and all bioethics. Its gems will be building blocks for further research and a wonderful resource for teaching.
— Laura Purdy, professor of philosophy and Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells College in Aurora, New York
The collection is thought provoking....and well worth reading....It is a valuable contribution in the battle for a socially just world.
— Philosophy in Review, October 2006
In this collection, the editors have brought together an impressive range of international voices addressing the connections among feminism, human rights, and global development. The result is a fascinating and rigorous examination of the common ground between these three fundamental areas of bioethics. This collection demonstrates the significant contributions that feminist analysis can make to questions of human rights and development, and broadens the debate in important ways. Feminist ethics has much to offer, and much to gain from, dialogues of this nature.
— Wendy Rogers, associate professor of medical ethics and health law at Flinders University in Australia