ABSTRACT

Alongside globalization, the sense of vulnerability among people and populations has increased. We feel vulnerable to disease as new infections spread rapidly across the globe, while disasters and climate change make health increasingly precarious. Moreover, clinical trials of new drugs often exploit vulnerable populations in developing countries that otherwise have no access to healthcare and new genetic technologies make people with disabilities vulnerable to discrimination. Therefore the concept of ‘vulnerability’ has contributed new ideas to the debates about the ethical dimensions of medicine and healthcare.

This book explains and elaborates the new concept of vulnerability in today’s bioethics. Firstly, Henk ten Have argues that vulnerability cannot be fully understood within the framework of individual autonomy that dominates mainstream bioethics today: it is often not the individual person who is vulnerable, rather that his or her vulnerability is created through the social and economic conditions in which he or she lives. Contending that the language of vulnerability offers perspectives beyond the traditional autonomy model, this book offers a new approach which will enable bioethics to evolve into a global enterprise.

This groundbreaking book critically analyses the concept of vulnerability as a global phenomenon. It will appeal to scholars and students of ethics, bioethics, globalization, healthcare, medical science, medical research, culture, law, and politics.

chapter 1|19 pages

The idea of vulnerability

chapter 2|17 pages

Growing interest in vulnerability

chapter 4|32 pages

The bioethical discourse of vulnerability

chapter 5|31 pages

We are all vulnerable

Philosophical perspectives on vulnerability

chapter 6|25 pages

Some of us are more vulnerable

Political perspectives on vulnerability

chapter 7|18 pages

Vulnerability is everywhere

Globalization and vulnerability

chapter 8|40 pages

Theoretical implications of vulnerability

chapter 9|10 pages

Practical applications of vulnerability