Literature DB >> 24131100

The emergence of the 'ethnic donor': the cultural production and relocation of organ donation in the UK.

Ciara Kierans1, Jessie Cooper.   

Abstract

Organ donation is constructed in the UK as a public responsibility, but more particularly as an obligation for members of minority ethnic communities. This paper draws attention to the ways in which 'ethnicity' has been made problematic by the allocation practices of transplant medicine, health promotion discourses and policy developments. Taken together, they have served to culturalise and racialise the procurement of organs. As the problem of organ donation is as much made inside medicine as outside it, this paper argues greater attention ought to be paid to these institutional practices and processes. Drawing on ethnographic work in the north of England, and with a specific focus on the organ consent encounter, this paper shows how categories of ethnicity in organ transplantation are an outcome of biopolitical and institutional practices. It argues that organ donation is best thought of, less as a discrete temporally-bounded act of decision-making, and more as a set of variegated situated practices that, in all manner of ways, problematically produce the publics that transplant medicine has come to rely upon so profoundly.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24131100     DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2013.845480

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anthropol Med        ISSN: 1364-8470


  1 in total

1.  "It's harder for the likes of us": racially minoritised stem cell donation as ethico-racial imperative.

Authors:  Ros Williams
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2021-07-13
  1 in total

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