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SERIES<br />
MEDICO-LEGAL STUDIES<br />
THE INTERNATIONAL LIBRARY OF MEDICINE, ETHICS AND LAW<br />
Series Editor: Michael D. Freeman, University College London, UK<br />
‘…the series provides a handy means of access to recent articles and excerpts from them…the editors’ practice of interpreting these areas of medical ethics<br />
and the law broadly ensures that the coverage is thought provoking in itself.’ Feminist Legal Studies<br />
This nineteen volume series brings together the most significant published essays in the field, edited by recognized experts. Each editor also provides an informative<br />
introduction, summarizing the area and the relevance of the articles chosen. For more information on this series, including a full list of titles, contents listings<br />
and more, please visit www.ashgate.com/legalreference<br />
NEW<br />
The Ethics of Public Health,<br />
Volumes I and II<br />
Edited by Michael Freeman, University College London, UK<br />
The International Library of Medicine, Ethics and Law<br />
Contents:<br />
VOLUME I:<br />
INTRODUCTION:<br />
PART I: AN INTRODUCTION:<br />
The genesis of public health ethics, Ronald Bayer and<br />
Amy L. Fairchild;<br />
Rethinking the meaning of public health, Mark A. Rothstein;<br />
From old to new public health: role tensions and contradictions, Anita Goraya<br />
and Graham Scambler;<br />
Health promotion development in Europe: Achievements and challenges, E. Ziglio,<br />
S. Hagard and J. Griffiths.<br />
PART II: AND BIOETHICS:<br />
Public health ethics: Mapping the terrain, James F. Childress, Ruth R. Faden,<br />
Ruth D. Gaare, Lawrence O. Gostin, Jeffrey Kahn, Richard J. Bonnie,<br />
Nancy E. Kass, Anna C. Mastroianni, Jonathan D. Moreno and Philip Nieburg;<br />
Ethics and public health, forging a strong relationship, Daniel Callahan<br />
and Bruce Jennings;<br />
Broadening the bioethics agenda, Dan W. Brock;<br />
How infectious diseases got left out – and what this omission might have meant<br />
for bioethics, Leslie P. Francis, Margaret P. Battin, Jay A. Jacobson,<br />
Charles B. Smith and Jeffrey Botkin;<br />
Public health ethics: From foundations and frameworks to justice and global public<br />
health, Nancy E. Kass;<br />
Ethics and infectious diseases, Michael J. Selgelid.<br />
PART III: THE HISTORICAL DEBATE:<br />
The importance of social intervention in Britain’s mortality decline c.1850–1914:<br />
A re-interpretation of the role of public health, Simon Szreter;<br />
The rise of surveillance medicine, David Armstrong.<br />
PART IV: RESEARCH ISSUES:<br />
Ethical principles for the conduct of human subject research: Population-based<br />
research and ethics, Larry Gostin;<br />
Protection of research subjects: Do special rules apply in epidemiology?, A.M. Capron;<br />
Children in HIV/AIDS clinical trials: Still vulnerable after all these years, Carol Levine;<br />
Protecting communities in research: Philosophical and pragmatic challenges,<br />
Charles Weijer;<br />
Sick individuals and sick populations, Geoffrey Rose.<br />
PART V: PUBLIC HEALTH AND AUTONOMY:<br />
Should public health respect autonomy?, Spencer A. Hall;<br />
Obligatory precautions against infection, Marcel Verweij.<br />
PART VI: QUESTIONS OF GOVERNANCE:<br />
Governance, microgovernance and health, Scott Burris;<br />
Globalization and cholera: Implications for global governance, Kelley Lee<br />
and Richard Dodgson;<br />
Beyond communicable disease control: Health in the age of globalization,<br />
Dyna Arhin-Tenkorang and Pedro Conceiçao;<br />
Strengthening governance for global health research, Kelley Lee and Anne Mills.<br />
PART VII: PUBLIC HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS:<br />
Is there a government in the cockpit: a passenger’s perspective, or global public health:<br />
the role of human rights, Sofia Gruskin;<br />
Medicine and public health, ethics and human rights, Jonathan M. Mann;<br />
Global disparities in health and human rights: A critical commentary,<br />
Soloman R. Benatar.<br />
PART VIII: SURVEILLANCE AND PRIVACY:<br />
The limits of privacy: surveillance and the control of disease, Ronald Bayer<br />
and Amy Fairchild.<br />
PART IX: PREVENTION AND ITS LIMITS:<br />
Individual and collective considerations in public health: Influenza vaccination<br />
in nursing homes, Marcel Verweij;<br />
The precautionary principle, epidemiology and the ethics of delay, Elihu D. Richter<br />
and Richard Laster;<br />
The precautionary principle also applies to public health actions, Bernard D. Goldstein.<br />
PART X: CONFINEMENT AND LIBERTY:<br />
Cuba’s quarantine of AIDS victims: A violation of human rights,? David W. Johnston;<br />
Controlling AIDS in Cuba: The logic of quarantine, Ronald Bayer and C. Healton;<br />
The politics of AIDS: Compulsory state powers, public health and civil liberties,<br />
Larry Gostin;<br />
NAME INDEX.<br />
14 LEGAL REFERENCE 2010<br />
VOLUME II:<br />
INTRODUCTION:<br />
PART I: THE SARS CRISIS:<br />
SARS: Political pathology of the first post-Westphalian<br />
pathogen, David P. Fidler;<br />
China’s response to SARS, Ruotao Wang;<br />
Ethics and SARS: Lessons from Toronto, Peter A. Singer,<br />
Solomon R. Benatar, Mark Bernstein, Abdullah S. Daar,<br />
Bernard M. Dickens, Susan K. MacRae, Ross E.G. Upshur,<br />
Linda Wright and Randi Zlotnik Shaul.<br />
PART II: HIV AND AIDS:<br />
A global political economy approach to AIDS: Ideology,<br />
interests and implications, Kelley Lee and Anthony B. Zwi.<br />
PART III: BIOTERRORISM:<br />
Rights and dangers: Bioterrorism and the ideologies of public health, Ronald Bayer<br />
and James Colgrove;<br />
Critical biological agents: Disease reporting as a tool for determining bioterrorism<br />
preparedness, Heather H. Horton, James J. Misrahi, Gene W. Matthews<br />
and Paula L. Kocher;<br />
Bioterrorism law and policy: Critical choices in public health, James G. Hodge, Jr.;<br />
Blinded by bioterrorism: Public health and liberty in the 21st century, George J. Annas;<br />
Quarantine redux: Bioterrorism, AIDS and the curtailment of individual liberty<br />
in the name of public health, Wendy E. Parmet;<br />
Bioethics and the national security state, Jonathan D. Moreno;<br />
Public health: A neglected counterterrorist measure, Richard Horton.<br />
PART IV: AVIAN FLU:<br />
Pandemic influenza: Public health preparedness for the next global health emergency,<br />
Lawrence O. Gostin;<br />
Preparing for an influenza pandemic: Ethical issues, Jaro Kotalik.<br />
PART V: CLIMATE CHANGE:<br />
Climate change, human health and the post-cautionary principle, Lisa Heinzerling.<br />
PART VI: TOBACCO CONTROL:<br />
The ethics of smoking, Robert E. Goodin;<br />
Smokers’ rights to health care: Why the ‘restoration argument’ is a moralising wolf<br />
in a liberal sheep’s clothing, Stephen Wilkinson;<br />
Using litigation to make public health policy: Theoretical and empirical challenges<br />
in assessing product liability, tobacco and gun litigation, Timothy D. Lytton.<br />
PART VII: VACCINATION:<br />
Mass immunization programmes: Some philosophical issues, Tim Dare;<br />
Public communication, risk perception and the viaibility of preventive vaccination<br />
against communicable diseases, Thomas May;<br />
The determination of ‘best interests’ in relation to childhood vaccinations,<br />
Angus Dawson;<br />
Ethical issues for vaccines and immunization, Jeffrey B. Ulmer and Margaret A. Liu.<br />
PART VIII: PUBLIC HEALTH AND GENETIC HEALTH:<br />
From genes to public health: The applications of genetic technology in disease<br />
prevention, Muin J. Khoury and the Genetics Working Group;<br />
Public health and the ‘new’ genetics: balancing individual and collective outcomes,<br />
Evan Willis;<br />
Genetic screening from a public health perspective: Some lessons from the HIV<br />
experience, Scott Burris and Lawrence O. Gostin;<br />
Biobanking: International norms, Bartha Maria Knoppers;<br />
Harnessing the benefits of biobanks, Lori B. Andrews;<br />
Genetic exceptionalism and legislative pragmatism, Mark Rothstein.<br />
PART IX: PUBLIC HEALTH AND EQUITY:<br />
Ethical issues in the use of cost effectiveness analysis for the prioritisation<br />
of healthcare resources, Dan W. Brock;<br />
Health equity and social justice, Fabienne Peter;<br />
Health by association? Social capital, social theory and political economy of public<br />
health, Simon Szreter and Michael Woolcock.<br />
PART X: PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE DEVELOPING WORLD:<br />
Rethinking medical ethics: A view from below, Paul Farmer<br />
and Nicole Gastineau Campos;<br />
The injustice of unsafe motherhood, Rebecca J. Cook and Bernard M. Dickens;<br />
Public health in developing countries, Sarah Macfarlane, Mary Racelis<br />
and Florence Muli-Musiime;<br />
Justice and medical research: A global perspective, Solomon R. Benatar;<br />
A global health fund: A leap of faith?, Ruiarí Brugha and Gill Walt;<br />
The new international health regulations: An historic development for international<br />
law and public health, David P. Fidler and Lawrence O. Gostin;<br />
NAME INDEX.<br />
Includes 69 previously published journal articles in 2 volumes<br />
March 2010 1166 pages<br />
Hardback 978-0-7546-2605-3 £315.00