This is a collection of Ruth Macklins previously published articles that appeared in scholarly journals or as chapters in books. Dr. Macklins pioneering work in ethics and global health spans more than two decades. The articles in this volume range from a chapter in a book published in 1989 to a journal article currently in press. The essays fall into two broad categories:: policy and practice, and multinational research. Topics in the first category include cultural beliefsand attitudes regarding family planning, long-acting contraception, abortion, and more broadly, policies and practices affecting womens health. Two essays dealing with justice focus on HIV/AIDS:: how developing country governments might distribute medications fairly to all who are in need; and whatobligations do industrialized countries and world leaders have to provide affordable medications to developing countries. A theme that runs throughout the essays is a defense of the universality of ethical principles, despite cultural differences that exist around the globe. The section on multinational research includes articles on international ethics guidance documents, such as the Declaration of Helsinki; discussion of the obligations of researchers and sponsors when they conductresearch in developing countries; what constitutes exploitation when research is conducted in resource-poor countries; and, as in the first section of the book, the application of universal ethical principles to the global research enterprise. The author criticizes the view that double standards inresearch are acceptable:: one standard for rich countries, and a lower standard for developing countries. Several essays deal with sensitive and controversial ethical aspects of research on reproductive health and HIV/AIDS.
IntroductionAcknowledgmentsPart One Policy and Practice ONE Ethics and Human Values in Family Planning: Perspectives of Different Cultural and Religious Settings TWO Abortion Controversies: Ethics, Politics, and Religion THREE Cultural Difference and Long-Acting Contraception FOUR Respect for Tradition FIVE Ethics and Equity in Access to HIV Treatment: 3 by 5 Initiative SIX Affordable and Accessible Drugs for Developing Countries: Recent DevelopmentsSEVEN Global Inequalities in Womens Health: Who Is Responsible for Doing What? EIGHT Toward a Theory of Vulnerability Part Two Multinational Research NINE Universality of the Nuremberg Code TEN A Defense of Fundamental Principles and Human Rights: A Response to Baker ELEVEN Justice in International Research TWELVE Is Ethics Universal? Gender, Science, and Culture in Reproductive Health ResearchTHIRTEEN After Helsinki: Unresolved Issues in International ResearchFOURTEEN Four Forward-looking Guidance PointsFIFTEEN Avoiding ExploitationSIXTEEN Yet Another Guideline? The UNESCO Draft DeclarationSEVENTEEN Appropriate Ethical StandardsEIGHTEEN The Declaration of Helsinki: another revisionNINETEEN Intertwining Biomedical Research and Public Health in HIV Preventive Microbicide ResearchTWENTY Ethical Challenges in HIV Microbicide Research: What Protections Do Women Need
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