Perspectives

Biopolitical Times
Each passing year, more people die who would be eligible for reparations after involuntary sterilization in California.
Biopolitical Times
There has been little-to-no discussion in the press or in scientific circles about whether deafness can be called a ‘serious’ condition.

Aggregated News

Ukraine has become an increasingly popular destination for foreign couples seeking affordable surrogacy services since they became legal in 2002. But as demand grows, so do reports of alleged exploitation of both surrogate mothers and intended parents. 

Aggregated News

Disabled lives are lives, and are charged with inherent dignity. Most people with disabilities don’t wish they had never been born. Some have rich lives despite their disability, but others would say they have rich lives at least in part because of their disability.

Harriet discussed her experiences writing and talking about the increasingly powerful “medical-industrial complex,” the erosion of informed consent in biomedical research, and the ways that commercial dynamics have aggravated issues of distributive and social justice. She also describes the resistance she has encountered when writing about these topics, especially in response to her recently published book Deadly Monopolies: The Shocking Corporate Takeover of Life Itself--And the Consequences for Your Health and Our Medical Future. She addressed opportunities for scholars to engage more directly in communicating their ideas to broader audiences and the difficulties they may face in “going public.” And she pressed the case she makes in Deadly Monopolies for what Osagie Obasogie called, in a review of the book “a broader political consciousness of science and technology.