Calendar

Lec # Topics key dates
Part One: Foundations of Bio-Medical Ethics and Modern "Bio-Politics"
1 Section One: Introduction: Bio-Medical Ethics and Bio-Politics: From Clinical Practice and Medical Research to Crisis of Medical Humanitarianism in the Field
2 Section Two: Principles of Ethical Medical Practice and Research: Autonomy, Justice, Beneficence, and Nonmaleficience

What is Bio-Medical Ethics?
3-4 Section Three: Competing Discourses on Bioethics and Bio-Medical Practice - Anthropology, Feminism, Theology, and Law
5-7 Section Four: The Creation of Doctors and the Clinical Gaze or "Whose Body Is It, Anyway?" Reflection paper 1
(Lecture 7)
8-9 Section Five: Ethical Issues in the Practice of Medicine: Confidentiality and Disclosure; Patient Autonomy and Informed Consent
10-11 Section Six: Dilemmas of Public Health Practice: The Limits of Resources and its Allocation Reflection paper 2
(Lecture 10)
Part Two: Medical Technologies, the Body and the State
12-13 Section Seven: Medical Research and Ethical Medical Experimentation - from Eugenics to Anti-Retroviral Drug Trials Draft of first paper due
(Lecture 12)
14-15 Section Eight: Race, Contraception, and Family Planning: Contemporary Eugenics?

First paper drafts returned with comments
(Lecture 14)

Reflection paper 3
(Lecture 15)

Part Three: Globalizing Bioethics - The Politics of Reproduction
16-17 Section Nine: The Politics of Gender, Reproductive Technologies, and Family Planning across Cultures Revised version of paper 1 due
(Lecture 17)
18 Section Ten: Infertility, Assisted Reproduction, Kinship, and Citizenship across Cultures Reflection paper 4
(Lecture 18)
19-20

Section Eleven: State Politics of Human Genetic Engineering, Stem Cell Research, Cloning, and "Surplus Embryos"

Lecture 20

Guest Speaker: Dr. James Sherley, MIT Assoc. Professor of Biological Engineering

Reflection paper 5
(Lecture 20)
Part Four: Playing God? Life, Death, Bodies, and Spirits
21-24 Section Twelve: Organ Transplantation, End of Life Issues, and Death across Cultures Draft of second paper due 1 day after lecture 24
Part Five: Human Rights, Infectious Disease, and the Global Medical Commons
25-26 Section Thirteen: Clinical Dilemmas, Public Health, and Global Pharmaceuticals

Papers returned with preliminary grades
(Lecture 25)

Final version of second paper due (for those who revise) 2 days after lecture 26