Fear of the Common Good and the Neglect of Justice

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Abstract

This chapter traces the practical and conceptual origins of eight problematic commitments including the perception that there is an inherent moral dilemma at the heart of research with humans and the tendency to conceptualize research as a private transaction between researchers and participants without clear connections to the requirements of a just social order. It introduces readers who are new to research ethics to key cases and documents relating to domestic and international research and illustrates how they gave rise to the problematic views that produce conceptual and practical tensions in the field. The chapter frames the questions that will be addressed in subsequent chapters, including issues about research risk; the role of paternalism in research ethics; and requirements relating to responsiveness to host community health needs, the standard of care, and post-trial access in international research.

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London, A. J. (2021). Fear of the Common Good and the Neglect of Justice. In For the Common Good (pp. 27–86). Oxford University PressNew York. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197534830.003.0002

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