Literature DB >> 17039630

Gender and ethics committees: where's the 'different voice'?

Donna Dickenson1.   

Abstract

Prominent international and national ethics commissions such as the UNESCO International Bioethics Committee rarely achieve anything remotely resembling gender equality, although local research and ethics committees are somewhat more egalitarian. Under-representation of women is particularly troubling when the subject matter of modern bioethics so disproportionately concerns women's bodies, and when such committees claim to derive 'universal' standards. Are women missing from many ethics committees because of relatively straightforward, if discriminatory, demographic factors? Or are the methods of analysis and styles of ethics to which these bodies are committed somehow 'anti-female'? It has been argued, for example, that there is a 'different voice' in ethical reasoning, not confined to women but more representative of female experience. Similarly, some feminist writers, such as Evelyn Fox Keller and Donna Haraway, have asked difficult epistemological questions about the dominant 'masculine paradigm' in science. Perhaps the dominant paradigm in ethics committee deliberation is similarly gendered? This article provides a preliminary survey of women's representation on ethics committees in eastern and western Europe, a critical analysis of the supposed 'masculinism' of the principlist approach, and a case example in which a 'different voice' did indeed make a difference.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bioethics and Professional Ethics; Empirical Approach

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17039630     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8519.2006.00485.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioethics        ISSN: 0269-9702            Impact factor:   1.898


  4 in total

1.  Anti-theory in action? Planning for pandemics, triage and ICU or: how not to bite a bullet.

Authors:  Nathan Emmerich
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2011-02

Review 2.  A 15-Year Review of Trends in Representation of Female Subjects in Islamic Bioethics Research.

Authors:  Zeenat Hussain; Edyta Kuzian; Naveed Hussain
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2017-02

3.  Gender and the human genome.

Authors:  Ruth Chadwick
Journal:  Mens Sana Monogr       Date:  2009-01

4.  A survey of national ethics and bioethics committees.

Authors:  Johannes Köhler; Andreas Alois Reis; Abha Saxena
Journal:  Bull World Health Organ       Date:  2020-11-30       Impact factor: 9.408

  4 in total

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