Protecting Communities in Research: Philosophical and Pragmatic Challenges
Author(s)
Weijer, CharlesKeywords
Community-Institutional RelationsEthical Relativism
Medical Ethics
Human Experimentation
Moral Obligations
Personal Autonomy
Third-Party Consent
Informed Consent
Researcher-Subject Relations
Confidentiality
Research Subjects
Bioethics and Medical Ethics
Philosophy
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http://works.bepress.com/charlesweijer/160https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0963180199004120
Abstract
The issue of the protection of communities in clinical research first arose 10 years ago in studies conducted in technologically developing countries by scientists from technologically developed nations. The question was, which ethical standards ought to apply, those of the Western investigators or local standards?Date
1999-10-01Type
textIdentifier
oai:works.bepress.com:charlesweijer-1159http://works.bepress.com/charlesweijer/160
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0963180199004120