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Full-Text Articles in Health Law and Policy
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall-Winter 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall-Winter 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mediating Bioethical Disputes, Diane E. Hoffmann, Naomi Karp
Mediating Bioethical Disputes, Diane E. Hoffmann, Naomi Karp
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Dangers Of Directives Or The False Security Of Forms, Diane E. Hoffmann, Sheryl Itkin Zimmerman, Catherine J. Tompkins
The Dangers Of Directives Or The False Security Of Forms, Diane E. Hoffmann, Sheryl Itkin Zimmerman, Catherine J. Tompkins
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 1996
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Biology, Justice, And Women's Fate, Dorothy E. Roberts
Biology, Justice, And Women's Fate, Dorothy E. Roberts
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Blame And Danger: An Essay On Preventive Detention, Stephen J. Morse
Blame And Danger: An Essay On Preventive Detention, Stephen J. Morse
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Choice, Conscience, And Context, Mary Crossley
Choice, Conscience, And Context, Mary Crossley
Articles
Building on Professor Michael H. Shapiro's critique of arguments that some uses of new reproductive technologies devalue and use persons inappropriately (which is part of a Symposium on New Reproductive Technologies), this work considers two specific practices that increasingly are becoming part of the new reproductive landscape: selective reduction of multiple pregnancy and prenatal genetic testing to enable selective abortion. Professor Shapiro does not directly address either practice, but each may raise troubling questions that sound suspiciously like the arguments that Professor Shapiro sought to discredit. The concerns that selective reduction and prenatal genetic screening raise, however, relate not to …