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Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived-Experience
Assigning Responsibility for Children’s Health When Parents and Authorities Disagree: Whose Child?
Health Care Ethics through the Lens of Moral Distress
Ebook series3 titles

The International Library of Bioethics Series

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About this series

This book provides a multidisciplinary analysis of the potential conflict between a government’s duty to protect children and a parent(s)’ right to raise children in a manner they see fit. Using philosophical, bioethical, and legal analysis, the author  engages with key scholars in pediatric decision-making and individual and religious rights theory. Going beyond the parent-child dyad, the author is deeply concerned both with the inteests of the broader society and with the appropriate limits of government interference in the private sphere. The text offers a balance of individual and population interests, maximizing liberty but safeguarding against harm. Bioethics and law professors will therefore be able to use this text for both a foundational overview as well as specific, subject-level analysis. Clinicians such as pediatricians and gynecologists, as well as policy-makers can use this text to achieve balance between these often competing claims. The book is written by a physician with practical and theoretical knowledge of the subject, and deep sympathy for the parental and family perspectives. As such, the book proposes a new way of evaluating parental and state interventions in children's’ healthcare: a refreshing approach and a useful addition to the literature.


LanguageEnglish
PublisherSpringer
Release dateNov 11, 2017
Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived-Experience
Assigning Responsibility for Children’s Health When Parents and Authorities Disagree: Whose Child?
Health Care Ethics through the Lens of Moral Distress

Titles in the series (3)

  • Health Care Ethics through the Lens of Moral Distress

    82

    Health Care Ethics through the Lens of Moral Distress
    Health Care Ethics through the Lens of Moral Distress

    This book provides a bridge between the theory to practice gap in contemporary health care ethics. It explores the messiness of everyday ethical issues and validates the potential impacts on health care professionals as wounded healers who regularly experience close proximity to suffering and pain. This book speaks to why ethics matters on a personal level and how moral distress experiences can be leveraged instead of hidden. The book offers contributions to both scholarship and the profession. Nurses, physicians, social workers, allied health care professionals, as well as academics and students will benefit from this book. 

  • Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived-Experience

    84

    Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived-Experience
    Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived-Experience

    This book offers a unique description of how phenomenology can help professionals from medical, environmental and social fields to explore notions such as interaffectivity, empathy, epoche, reduction, and intersubjective encounter. Written by a group of top scholars, it uniquely covers the relationship between phenomenology and bioethics, and focuses not only on medical cases, but also on the environment and emerging technologies. This variety of themes, whilst including techno-ethics, environmental ethics, animal ethics, and medical ethics, is conducive to appreciating broadly how phenomenology can improve our quality of our life. Despite its difficult themes, the book appeals to an audience of both academics and professionals who are willing to understand how to increase the quality of care in their professional field. Chapter 8 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.

  • Assigning Responsibility for Children’s Health When Parents and Authorities Disagree: Whose Child?

    90

    Assigning Responsibility for Children’s Health When Parents and Authorities Disagree: Whose Child?
    Assigning Responsibility for Children’s Health When Parents and Authorities Disagree: Whose Child?

    This book provides a multidisciplinary analysis of the potential conflict between a government’s duty to protect children and a parent(s)’ right to raise children in a manner they see fit. Using philosophical, bioethical, and legal analysis, the author  engages with key scholars in pediatric decision-making and individual and religious rights theory. Going beyond the parent-child dyad, the author is deeply concerned both with the inteests of the broader society and with the appropriate limits of government interference in the private sphere. The text offers a balance of individual and population interests, maximizing liberty but safeguarding against harm. Bioethics and law professors will therefore be able to use this text for both a foundational overview as well as specific, subject-level analysis. Clinicians such as pediatricians and gynecologists, as well as policy-makers can use this text to achieve balance between these often competing claims. The book is written by a physician with practical and theoretical knowledge of the subject, and deep sympathy for the parental and family perspectives. As such, the book proposes a new way of evaluating parental and state interventions in children's’ healthcare: a refreshing approach and a useful addition to the literature.

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