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7Aged Parenting through ART and Other MeansIn Carolyn McLeod & Francoise Baylis (eds.), Family Making: Contemporary Ethical Challenges, Oxford University Press. pp. 287-312. 2014.Lately, the number of advanced age women seeking reproductive assistance has risen. While still not a mainstream activity, postmenopausal IVF has garnered attention because of sensationalized cases in the media. Ethicists have addressed this issue from a variety of perspectives, in some cases supporting older women’s rights to access reproductive services, such as egg donation and IVF, and, in other cases, citing concerns for the health and welfare of both older women and their offspring in orde…Read more
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9Lassie, Come Home!In Christine Overall (ed.), Pets and People: The Ethics of our Relationships with Companion Animals, Oxford University Press. pp. 143-156. 2017.While the practice of cloning companion animals is not widespread, it is nevertheless an option available to grieving humans who desperately miss their beloved companions. This chapter employs a care ethics framework to argue that pet cloning exploits the individual’s capacity for relationship and attachment, and wrongly characterizes the nature of these special relationships. The offer to clone a person’s companion animal suggests that such relationships are fungible: that feelings of love and …Read more
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5Feminist Approaches to Medical Aid in Dying: Identifying a Path ForwardIn Michael Cholbi & Jukka Varelius (eds.), New Directions in the Ethics of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, Springer Verlag. pp. 243-262. 2023.This essay addresses feminist approaches to medical aid in dying (MAID), considering whether it is a practice that should be supported for women and other marginalized groups. Some feminists have raised rights and justice-based arguments in support of MAID; others have taken a care-based approach to suggest that the practice violates relationships of care and only worsens distrust between marginalized groups and the medical establishment. I argue that we need to adopt both justice and care appro…Read more
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46Birth certificates typically designate parents as ‘mothers’ or ‘fathers’ although some U.S. states offer non-gendered designations. We argue that gendered characterizations offer scant legal or moral value and that states should move to degender parental status on birth certificates but retain that information in registrations of birth. Registrations of birth identify the person giving birth to a child, when and where, and they report demographic and health information useful for civic and publi…Read more
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47No Place Like Home? Feminist Ethics and Home Health CareIndiana University Press. 2003.This book analyzes practices in the home health care industry and concludes that they are highly exploitative of both workers and patients. Under the existing system, underpaid workers are expected to perform tasks for which they are inadequately trained, in unreasonably short periods of time. This situation harms workers and puts home health care patients at risk. To the extent that the majority of patients and workers in home health care are women, I turn to feminist ethics for an alternative …Read more
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Contesting Normative Values in Eldercare: The Challenge from Feminist PhilosophyGenerations 41 (4). 2017.
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Aged Parenting through ART and Other MeansIn Carolyn MacLeod Francois Baylis (ed.), Family-Making: Contemporary Ethical Challenges, Oxford University Press. pp. 287-312. 2014.
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1Gestational Surrogacy and the Feminist PerspectiveIn E. Scott Sills (ed.), Handbook of Gestational Surrogacy: International Clinical Practice and Policy Issues, Cambridge University Press. pp. 25-32. 2016.
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"Lassie, Come Home!": Ethical Concerns about Companion Animal CloningIn Christine Overall (ed.), Pets and People: The Ethics of our Relationships with Companion Animals, Oxford University Press. pp. 143-156. 2017.
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2Who's Your Mama? Assisted Reproductive Technology and the Meaning of MotherhoodIn Carlos G. Prado (ed.), How Technology is Changing Human Behavior: Issues and Benefits, Praeger. pp. 42-64. 2019.
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453A Call for Gender Equity in Medical Tort ReformApa Newsletter on Philosophy and Medicine. 2004.This paper will consider ethical issues arising from medical tort litigation. I will argue that deep changes are required to ensure fairness in litigation and in order to hold morally responsible those corporations that take unnecessary risks with consumers’ lives.
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21Bioethics in a Changing World (edited book)Bioethics in a Changing World is an introductory textbook for individuals who are new to the study of bioethics.This interdisciplinary field, which encompasses philosophy, religion, sociology, gerontology, psychiatry, biomedical science, law, and nursing (to name a few), has been rapidly growing and developing over the last half-century.In order to get a handle on what "doing" bioethics entails, it is helpful to start with the basic philosophical foundations of bioethical theory and then conside…Read more
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45Degendering Parents on Birth CertificatesPerspectives in Biology and Medicine 66 (4): 579-594. 2023.Abstractabstract:Birth certificates typically designate parents as "mothers" or "fathers," although some US states offer nongendered designations. The authors argue that gendered characterizations offer scant legal or moral value and that states should move to degender parental status on birth certificates but retain that information in registrations of birth. Registrations of birth identify the person giving birth to a child, when, and where, and they report demographic and health information u…Read more
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123Supervaluation of pregnant women is reductive of womenJournal of Medical Ethics 50 (1): 29-30. 2024.Robinson argues that by certain threshold criteria, pregnant women qualify for a higher moral status by reason of their pregnancies. While her intention is to make this a status upgrade for women, we worry that it may result in a status downgrade for women as a class, by presupposing and reinforcing women’s value in relation to their reproductive labour. Historically, central to feminist analysis is resistance to reductive accounts of women in relation to their reproductivity. For example, de Be…Read more
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144So not mothers: responsibility for surrogate orphansJournal of Medical Ethics 44 (8): 551-554. 2018.The law ordinarily recognises the woman who gives birth as the mother of a child, but in certain jurisdictions, it will recognise the commissioning couple as the legal parents of a child born to a commercial surrogate. Some commissioning parents have, however, effectively abandoned the children they commission, and in such cases, commercial surrogates may find themselves facing unexpected maternal responsibility for children they had fully intended to give up. Any assumption that commercial surr…Read more
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96Feminist Approaches to Medical Aid in Dying: Identifying a Path Forward (2nd ed.)In Michael Cholbi & Jukka Varelius (eds.), New Directions in the Ethics of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, Springer Verlag. pp. 243-262. 2023.This essay addresses feminist approaches to medical aid in dying (MAID), considering whether it is a practice that should be supported for women and other marginalized groups. Some feminists have raised rights and justice-based arguments in support of MAID; others have taken a care-based approach to suggest that the practice violates relationships of care and only worsens distrust between marginalized groups and the medical establishment. I argue that we need to adopt both justice and care appro…Read more
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71McLeod's Conscience in Reproductive Health Care and Its Relationship to Reproductive Freedom and Faith-Based HealthcareInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (2): 153-160. 2022.Carolyn McLeod's book is timely and important, especially when one considers the state of conscientious objection in a country like the United States. During his presidency, Donald Trump announced an expanded "conscience rule" for healthcare workers according to which they would have the protected right to morally and religiously oppose a variety of procedures, including abortion, sterilization, assisted suicide, and other medical procedures. In 2019, a number of states, local governments, and h…Read more
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110Lonely Deaths: Dying in Nursing Homes during COVID-19International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 15 (1): 135-137. 2022.Our 2021 article, "Dying Well in Nursing Homes During COVID-19 and Beyond: The Need for a Relational and Familial Ethic," addresses the response to the COVID-19 pandemic within nursing homes and the impact it had on the lives of residents, care providers, and families. We acknowledge that, at the height of the pandemic, when infection and death rates were soaring in these facilities, extreme "lockdown" measures may have been justified; but these measures resulted in significant relational costs.…Read more
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124Dying well in nursing homes during COVID‐19 and beyond: The need for a relational and familial ethicBioethics 35 (6): 589-595. 2021.This paper applies a relational and familial ethic to address concerns relating to nursing home deaths and advance care planning during Covid‐19 and beyond. The deaths of our elderly in nursing homes during this pandemic have been made more complicated by the restriction of visitors even at the end of life, a time when families would normally be present. While we must be vigilant about preventing unnecessary deaths caused by coronavirus outbreaks in nursing homes, some deaths of our elders are i…Read more
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108Gestation as motheringBioethics 34 (9): 960-968. 2020.Some commentators maintain that gestational surrogates are not ‘mothers’ in a way capable of grounding a claim to motherhood. These commentators find that the practices that constitute motherhood do not extend to gestational surrogates. We argue that gestational surrogates should be construed as mothers of the children they bear, even if they fully intend to surrender those children at birth to the care of others. These women stand in a certain relationship to the expected children: they live in…Read more
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200Feminist issues in domestic and transnational surrogacy: The case of JapanInternational Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 7 (2): 121-143. 2014.I consider how a feminist account might address the practice of surrogacy in Japan, both domestically and in the transnational context. Japanese culture emphasizes traditional values, family heritage, and the value of reproduction. Japan offers an interesting case study, since surrogacy is currently under review, and the government is in the process of determining its stance on the practice. I will advocate for legal changes to how surrogacy is treated, suggesting that Japan should eliminate the…Read more
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86A Contextualized Approach to Patient Autonomy Within the Therapeutic RelationshipJournal of Medical Humanities 19 (4): 299-311. 1998.Some authors have advanced a contractual model to protect patient autonomy within the therapeutic relationship. Such a conception of the physicianâpatient relationship is intended to serve both parties by respecting patients' choices and preserving physician integrity. I critique this contractual view and offer an alternative, feminist contextualized approach to autonomy within the therapeutic relationship. This approach places the physician-patient relationship within a larger social context,…Read more
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On the Call for a Feminist Notion of Autonomy in Biomedical EthicsDissertation, Mcmaster University (Canada). 1996.In this thesis I argue that the received view of autonomy is insufficient for both biomedical ethics and feminist theory. I begin with an examination of the received view of autonomy; I then indicate the way in which this view of autonomy has been applied to health care ethics. A feminist relational approach to autonomy is explored: I argue that such an approach has many strengths in that it gives us a more accurate picture of the self-in-relationships and that it recognizes many social and stru…Read more
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137Grin and Bare ItPhilosophy in the Contemporary World 11 (1): 45-53. 2004.This paper considers the issues surrounding women’s bare-breastedness and breastfeeding in public. I argue that women should have equal freedoms with men to bare their breasts in public, but not for the reasons commonly cited Proponents of “the public breast” tend to focus on the similarities between women’s and men’s breasts; I argue that the sameness versus difference debate is unhelpful in resolving this question. As I argue, women’s breasts differ from men’s in significant ways, and by dismi…Read more
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175Book Review: Mary Mahowald. GENES, WOMEN, EQUALITY. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000 (review)Hypatia 20 (2): 200-202. 2005.
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456On the Use of IVF by Post-menopausal WomenHypatia 14 (1): 77-96. 1999.Nonfeminist accounts of post-menopausal IVF reject the practice on four main grounds: I) scarcity of resources; 2) fairness; 3) the “inappropriateness” of post-menopausal motherhood; and 4) concerns for orphaned children. I argue that these grounds are insufficient for denying post-menopausal women IVF access. I then suggest that a feminist evaluation of the practice is more compelling; ultimately, however, we have no strong grounds for a policy denying post-menopausal women access to this techn…Read more
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100Ethical Androcentrism and Maternal Substance AddictionInternational Journal of Applied Philosophy 13 (2): 165-175. 1999.In this paper, I argue that bioethics suffers from a masculinist approach-what I call “ethical androcentrism.” Despite the genesis of other legitimate approaches to ethics (such as feminist, narrative, and communicative ethics), this masculinist tradition persists. The first part of my paper concerns the problem of ethical androcentrism, and how it is manifest in our typical ways of “doing” bioethics (as teachers, ethicists, policymakers, and medical practitioners). After arguing that bioethics …Read more
Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Biomedical Ethics |
| Feminist Bioethics |
| Death and Dying |
| Reproductive Ethics |
| Feminist Philosophy |