journal
Journals Kennedy Institute of Ethics Jo...

Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal

https://read.qxmd.com/read/38468642/mutual-aid-praxis-aligns-principles-and-practice-in-grassroots-covid-19-responses-across-the-us
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nora Kenworthy, Emily Hops, Amy Hagopian
COVID-19 elicited a rapid emergence of new mutual aid networks in the US, but the practices of these networks are understudied. Using qualitative methods, we explored the empirical ethics guiding US-based mutual aid networks' activities, and assessed the alignment between principles and practices as networks mobilized to meet community needs during 2020-21. We conducted in-depth interviews with 15 mutual aid group organizers and supplemented these with secondary source materials on mutual aid activities and participant observation of mutual aid organizing efforts...
June 2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38661972/contributor
#2
EDITORIAL
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588229/mutual-aid-as-effective-altruism
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ricky Mouser
Effective altruism has a strategy problem. Overreliance on a strategy of donating to the most effective charities keeps us on the firefighter's treadmill, continually pursuing the next-highest quantifiable marginal gain. But on its own, this is politically shortsighted. Without any long-term framework within which these individual rescues fit together to bring about the greatest overall impact, we are almost certainly leaving a lot of value on the table. Thus, effective altruists' preferred means undercut their professed aims...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588228/solidarity-over-charity-mutual-aid-as-a-moral-alternative-to-effective-altruism
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Savannah Pearlman
Effective Altruism is a popular social movement that encourages individuals to donate to organizations that effectively address humanity's most severe poverty. However, because Effective Altruists are committed to doing the most good in the most effective ways, they often argue that it is wrong to help those nearest to you. In this article, I target a major subset of Effective Altruists who consider it a moral obligation to do the most good possible. Call these Obligation-Oriented Effective Altruists (OOEAs), and their movement Obligation-Oriented Effective Altruism (OOEA)...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588227/a-socialist-analysis-of-the-mutual-aid-solidarity-during-the-endsars-protest-in-multi-religious-nigeria
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Favour Uroko, Chinyere Nwaoga, Ezichi Ituma
This study describes the results of a social analysis of mutual aid solidarity during Nigeria's #EndSARSprotests against Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) brutality in Nigeria. The results reveal that the protests achieved success with the assistance of mutual aid solidarity networks. Yet there is a dearth of literature exploring the reasons for this accomplishment. Nigeria is a country where everything done usually has a religious coloration and interpretation; however, the 2020 mutual aid solidarity in the #EndSARS protests proved otherwise...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588226/editor-s-note-june-2023
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Savannah Pearlman, Mark Lance
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588225/contributor
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588136/the-first-smart-pill-digital-revolution-or-last-gasp
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna K Swartz, Phoebe Friesen
Abilify MyCite was granted regulatory approval in 2017, becoming the world's first "smart pill" that could digitally track whether patients had taken their medication. The new technology was introduced as one that had gained the support of patients and ethicists alike, and could contribute to solving the widespread and costly problem of patient nonadherence. Here, we offer an in-depth exploration of this narrative, through an examination of the origins and development of Abilify, the drug that would later become MyCite...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588135/social-robots-to-fend-off-loneliness
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zohar Lederman, Nancy S Jecker
Social robots are increasingly being deployed to address social isolation and loneliness, particularly among older adults. Clips on social media attest that individuals availing themselves of this option are pleased with their robot companions. Yet, some people find the use of social robots to meet fundamental human emotional needs disturbing. This article clarifies and critically evaluates this response. It sets forth a framework for loneliness, which characterizes one kind of loneliness as involving an affective experience of lacking human relations that provide certain social goods...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588134/minding-brain-injury-consciousness-and-ethics-discourse-and-deliberations
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph J Fins, James Giordano
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588132/editor-s-note
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Quill Kukla
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588129/equality-and-a-complete-ban-on-the-sale-of-cigarettes
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nethanel Lipshitz
In the last two decades it has become increasingly common to advocate for a complete ban on the sale of cigarettes. One reason in favor of such a ban is egalitarian: differences in the prevalence of smoking between socioeconomic groups go a long way in explaining health inequality, and a complete ban might be effective in reducing this inequality. However, a complete ban might also be objectionable on egalitarian grounds if issued with a discriminatory intent or if it is selectively paternalistic. This article argues that a complete ban is likely to be guilty of both, especially when one of its aims is to reduce unequal rates of smoking between groups...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588128/how-should-urban-climate-change-planning-advance-social-justice
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bridget Pratt
Cities are struggling to balance the moral imperatives of sustainable development, with equity and social justice often ignored and negatively impacted by climate change mitigation and adaptation. Yet, the nature of these impacts on social justice has not been comprehensively investigated and little ethical guidance exists on how to better promote social justice in urban climate change planning practice. This article addresses the normative question: How should urban climate change planning advance social justice? It gathers empirical literature documenting the inclusivity and equity impacts of urban climate change planning and thematically analyses that literature for dimensions of social justice drawn from philosophical and urban justice theory...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588127/screening-out-neurodiversity
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jada Wiggleton-Little, Craig Callender
Autistic adults suffer from an alarmingly high and increasing unemployment rate. Many companies use pre-employment personality screening tests. These filters likely have disparate impacts on neurodivergent individuals, exacerbating this social problem. This situation gives rise to a bind. On the one hand, the tests disproportionately harm a vulnerable group in society. On the other, employers think that personality test scores are predictors of job performance and have a right to use personality traits in their decisions...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588126/varieties-of-community-uncertainty-and-clinical-equipoise
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alex John London, Patrick Bodilly Kane, Jonathan Kimmelman
The judgments of conscientious and informed experts play a central role in two elements of clinical equipoise. The first, and most widely discussed, element involves ensuring that no participant in a randomized trial is allocated to a level of treatment that everyone agrees is substandard. The second, and less often discussed, element involves ensuring that trials are likely to generate social value by producing the information necessary to resolve a clinically meaningful uncertainty or disagreement about the relative merits of a set of interventions...
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588124/editor-s-note-march-2023
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
(no author information available yet)
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588218/-white-fat-and-racist-racism-and-environmental-accounts-of-obesity
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Megan Dean, Nabina Liebow
This paper offers a novel argument for the claim that "environmental" explanations of obesity meant to help address racial health disparities may actually reinforce racism. While some contend that these explanations reinforce racist and sizeist interracial dynamics, we argue that environmental explanations can bolster intraracial hierarchies of whiteness that reinforce white supremacy. Deployments of environmental accounts in contexts like the U.S. invoke and intertwine two damaging dichotomies: the "good fatty/bad fatty" and the "good white person/bad white person...
2022: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588217/medicalization-contributory-injustice-and-mad-studies
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne-Marie Gagné-Julien
One recent body of work has concerned medicalization and how it can create epistemic injustice. It focuses on medicalization as a hermeneutical process that shapes the conceptual framework(s) we use to refer to some conditions/experiences. In parallel, some scholars with lived experience of madness have started to explore the epistemic harms suffered by the Mad community. Building on this, I argue that the process of medicalization in psychiatry affects the Mad community in a specific way that has been overlooked in the literature on medicalization and epistemic injustice...
2022: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588216/psychedelic-identity-shift-a-critical-approach-to-set-and-setting
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Neşe Devenot, Aidan Seale-Feldman, Elyse Smith, Tehseen Noorani, Albert Garcia-Romeu, Matthew W Johnson
While the literature on psychedelic medicine emphasizes the importance of set and setting alongside the quality of subjective drug effects for therapeutic efficacy, few scholars have explored the therapeutic frameworks that are used alongside psychedelics in the lab or in the clinic. Based on a narrative analysis of the treatment manual and post-session experience reports from a pilot study of psilocybin-assisted treatment for tobacco smoking cessation, this article examines how therapeutic frameworks interact with the psychedelic substance in ways that can rapidly reshape participants' identity and sense of self...
2022: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38588215/virtual-reality-and-technologically-mediated-love
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Gordon
An emerging line of research in bioethics questions whether enhanced love is less significant or valuable than otherwise, where "enhanced love" generally refers to cases where drugs (e.g., oxytocin, etc.) are relied on to maintain romantic relationships. Separate from these debates is a recent body of literature on the philosophy and psychology of "Virtual Reality (VR) dating," where romantic relationships are developed and sustained in a way that is mediated by VR. Interestingly, these discussions have proceeded largely independently from each other...
2022: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
journal
journal
30775
1
2
Fetch more papers »
Fetching more papers... Fetching...
Remove bar
Read by QxMD icon Read
×

Save your favorite articles in one place with a free QxMD account.

×

Search Tips

Use Boolean operators: AND/OR

diabetic AND foot
diabetes OR diabetic

Exclude a word using the 'minus' sign

Virchow -triad

Use Parentheses

water AND (cup OR glass)

Add an asterisk (*) at end of a word to include word stems

Neuro* will search for Neurology, Neuroscientist, Neurological, and so on

Use quotes to search for an exact phrase

"primary prevention of cancer"
(heart or cardiac or cardio*) AND arrest -"American Heart Association"

We want to hear from doctors like you!

Take a second to answer a survey question.