ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 2002: A collection of articles focused on women within a general study of medicine, ethics and the law. Topics covered include: areas where the institutions of medicine, ethics and the law intersect in women's reproductive and sexual lives; the impact of legal policies and dominant ethical beliefs on many aspects of women's health; and the health practices and policies of bioethics and health law. The editors recognise that it is important not to lose sight of social differences other than gender, such as race, ethnicity, class, age, sexuality, religion, level of physical and mental ability, and family relationships. In their approach they seek to consider the lives and experiences of women as primary. Hence, they focus on the question of how women's encounters with the health-care system are structured by gender and other socially significant dimensions of their lives (rather than the question of how women differ from the male "norm").

chapter 5|20 pages

Abortion and Embodiment 1

chapter 7|20 pages

Maternal-Fetal Relationship

The Courts and Social Policy

chapter 10|36 pages

Motherhood, Madness, and Law†

chapter 11|12 pages

“Ambiguous Sex”— or Ambivalent Medicine?

Ethical Issues in the Treatment of Intersexuality

chapter 19|5 pages

Privacy Beliefs and the Violent Family

Extending the Ethical Argument for Physician Intervention

chapter 20|36 pages

Reframing Women’s Risk:

Social Inequalities and HIV Infection