Browsing Scholarly Works by Subject "race"

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  • Russell, Camisha (Journal of Bioethical Inquiry, 2021)
    In this essay, I argue that bioethicists have a thus-far unfulfilled role to play in helping life scientists, including medical doctors and researchers, think about race. I begin with descriptions of how life scientists ...
  • Stone, Joe; Stockard, Jean; Gray, Jo Anna; Department of Economics, University of Oregon (Univeristy of Oregon, 2010-02)
    This paper offers the first birth-cohort test of the Wilson-Willis model of black-white differences in nonmarital childbearing. Cohort data are uniquely suited to the model, and unlike prior evidence, support the power ...
  • Stone, Joe; Stockard, Jean; Gray, Jo Anna (Munich Personal RePEc Archive, 2010-02)
    This paper offers the first birth-cohort test of the Wilson-Willis model of black-white differences in nonmarital childbearing. Cohort data are uniquely suited to the model, and unlike prior evidence, support the power ...
  • Russell, Camisha (Taylor and Francis Group, 2021)
    In this article, I begin by describing what I call this Black Lives Matter moment in the US. I then offer three reasons for considering racism as a bioethical issue, the least discussed of which is the way in which racism ...
  • Russell, Camisha (Philosophy Compass, 2016)
    Philosophers working in bioethics often hope to identify abstract principles and universal values to guide professional practice, relying on ideals of objectivity and impartiality, and on the power of rational (individual, ...
  • Russell, Camisha (Journal of Bioethical Inquiry, 2015)
    This paper explores the limitations of epistemic scientism for understanding the role the concept of race plays in assisted reproductive technology (ART) practices. Two major limitations center around the desire to use ...
  • Clark, Miriam (University of Oregon, 2022-10-04)
    Ample evidence suggests many U.S. institutions operate within a system of racial inequities, yet the existence of these inequities and their implications are regularly debated in public discourse. The term “School-to-Prison ...

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