•  110
    Where families and healthcare meet
    with M. A. Verkerk, Hilde Lindemann, Janice McLaughlin, Jackie Leach Scully, Ulrik Kihlbom, and Jacqueline Chin
    Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (2): 183-185. 2015.
  •  72
    From the Editors
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 10 (2): 1-3. 2017.
    With this issue of IJFAB, we mark the end of one phase of the journal’s life and take our first steps into the next. It was eleven years ago, in 2007, that the first issue of IJFAB, then based at Stony Brook University and published by Indiana University Press, appeared with Mary Rawlinson as editor. That first issue was made possible by long months of work on the part of Mary and a group of others who were convinced that for feminist bioethics to develop as a field, it needed its own journal wi…Read more
  •  164
    The Romance of the Family
    Hastings Center Report 38 (4): 19-21. 2008.
    We should not always expect parents to put their children first.
  •  71
    At the Center
    Hastings Center Report 24 (5). 1994.
  •  63
    At the Center
    with Hilde Lindemann Nelson
    Hastings Center Report 25 (4). 1995.
  •  19
    Book review (review)
    Journal of Value Inquiry 30 (1-2): 375-378. 1996.
  •  60
    Taking Nature's Pulse (review)
    Hastings Center Report 23 (5): 44. 1993.
    Book reviewed in this article: Ecosystem Health: New Goals for Environmental Management. Ed. Robert Costanza, Bryan G. Norton, and Benjamin D. Haskell.
  •  84
    When Doctors Say No: The Battleground of Medical Futility
    with Susan B. Rubin
    Hastings Center Report 30 (3): 49. 2000.
  •  55
    Case Study: Birth Plans and Professional Autonomy
    with Constance Perry and Linda Quinn
    Hastings Center Report 32 (2): 12. 2002.
  •  100
    Is It Ever Right to Do Wrong?
    Hastings Center Report 25 (3): 48-49. 2012.
  •  87
    Case Study: But Is It Assisted Suicide?
    with Joseph J. Fins and Milton Viederman
    Hastings Center Report 25 (3): 24. 1995.
  •  122
    Bioethics Education Expanding the Circle of Participants
    with Barbara C. Thornton and Daniel Callahan
    Hastings Center Report 23 (1): 25. 1993.
    Bioethics education now takes place outside universities as well as within them. How should clinicians, ethics committee members, and policymakers be taught the ethics they need, and how may their progress best be evaluated?
  •  642
    Just caring for the elderly
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 6 (2): 36-40. 2013.
    Midway in Martha Holstein’s article, these words occur: “[P]eople [should] get the help they need, when they need it, in the way that they would like to receive it, without exploiting family members or imperiling their dignity or self-respect” (24). In an essay that brims over with worrisome news, that this seemingly anodyne sentence appears in the section devoted to utopian thinking is perhaps the most dispiriting thought it conveys. Not that there isn’t keen competition for the role. Holstein …Read more
  •  209
    Donation by default? Examining feminist reservations about opt-out organ procurement
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 3 (1): 23-42. 2010.
    There is reason to believe that procuring organs from recently dead people who did not explicitly refuse to provide them—here referred to as “opt-out” arrangements—would ease growing shortages, thus extending the lives of many who otherwise would die soon. There is also a simple, apparently powerful argument—the “easy rescue requirement”—for believing that many people have strong moral reason to provide such life-extending support to others, thus bolstering the case for implementing opt-out syst…Read more
  •  173
    Progress in bioethics: Science, policy, and politics, edited by Jonathan D. Moreno and Sam Berger
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 4 (1): 237-241. 2011.
    Jonathan D. Moreno and Sam Berger, Progress in bioethics: Science, policy, and politics, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2010, reviewed by James Lindemann Nelson.
  •  148
    A Comment on Fry's “The Role of Caring in a Theory of Nursing Ethics”
    with Jeannine Ross Boyer
    Hypatia 5 (3): 153-158. 1990.
    Our response to Sara Fry's paper focuses on the difficulty of understanding her insistence on the fundamental character of caring in a theory of nursing ethics. We discuss a number of problems her text throws in the way of making sense of this idea, and outline our own proposal for how caring's role may be reasonably understood: not as an alternative object of value, competing with autonomy or patient good, but rather as an alternative way of responding toward that which is of value.
  •  59
    Critical Interests and Sources of Familial Decision-Making Authority for Incapacitated Patients
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (2): 143-148. 1995.
    How ought we to understand the sources and limits of the authority of family members to make health care decisions for their decisionally incapacitated relatives? This question is becoming increasingly crucial as the population ages and the power of medical technology waxes. It is also becoming increasingly contested, as faith in advance directives shows signs of waning, and the moral complexities of intimate relationship become more theoretically patent.This last point—the newly visible moral r…Read more
  •  112
    Cutting Motherhood in Two: Some Suspicions Concerning Surrogacy
    with Hilde Lindemann Nelson
    Hypatia 4 (3): 85-94. 1989.
    Surrogate motherhood-at least if carefully structured to protect the interests of the women involved-seems defensible along standard liberal lines which place great stress on free agreements as moral bedrocks. But feminist theories have tended to be suspicious about the importance assigned to this notion by mainstream ethics, and in this paper, we develop implications of those suspicions for surrogacy. We argue that the practice is inconsistent with duties parents owe to children and that it com…Read more
  •  53
    The article by Professor Baergen and Dr. Woodhouse makes a succinct and serious contribution to progress in bioethical understanding of deciding for others. They begin with what is by now a familiar claim: family proxy decision makers may sometimes make decisions on behalf of incapacitated relatives that depart from what might be optimal from the patient’s point of view, since the well-being of family members, or of the family as such, may be substantially affected by the direction of a patient’…Read more
  •  78
    In her final fragmentary novel Sanditon, Jane Austen develops a theme that pervades her work from her juvenilia onward: illness, and in particular, illness imagined, invented, or self-inflicted. While the “invention of odd complaints” is characteristically a token of folly or weakness throughout her writing, in this last work imagined illness is also both a symbol and a cause of how selves and societies degenerate. In the shifting world of Sanditon, hypochondria is the lubricant for a society be…Read more
  •  36
  •  47
    Critical Notice of Morals, Reason, and Animals
    Between the Species 6 (4): 13. 1990.
  • The Patient and the Family
    with Hilde Lindemann Nelson and Hugh LaFollettek
    Bioethics 11 (2): 175-176. 1997.
  •  1
    Another Voice: Love's Burdens
    Hastings Center Report. forthcoming.
  •  24
    Love's burdens
    Hastings Center Report 34 (5): 3. 2004.
  •  43
    The Patient in the Family: An Ethics of Medicine and Families
    with Hilde Lindemann Nelson
    Routledge. 1995.
    The Patient in the Family diagnoses the ways in which the worlds of home and hospital misunderstand each other. The authors explore how medicine, through its new reproductive technologies, is altering the stucture of families, how families can participate more fully in medical decision-making, and how to understand the impact on families of medical advances to extend life but not vitality