Litcius/Paper detail

Provincializing bioethics

Dwaipayan Banerjee

2022American Ethnologist11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Since the 1980s, anthropologists have criticized a US‐centric view of bioethics that presents individual autonomy as a universal principle without acknowledging its embeddedness in time and place. A recent turn in this critique points out how this view has gained dominance across the world, traveling alongside clinical trials and global health interventions. Here, centering a competing bioethical vision disrupts this division between the Global North as a site of ethical conceptualization and the South as the recipient of its diffusion. Indian legal bioethics—concerned with protecting the critically ill body in intensive care—rejects the primacy of autonomy, instead empowering courts to override the choices of patients, families, and doctors. This competing bioethics commits its own harms, misrepresenting vulnerability as a problem of sociomoral underdevelopment rather than as the outcome of increasing inflows of global capital, new patterns of land acquisition, and a growing public‐private health care divide. [ bioethics , end of life , norms , ethics , medicine , law , intensive care , Delhi , India ]

Topics & Concepts

BioethicsAutonomyConceptualizationEnvironmental ethicsUnderdevelopmentSociologyHealth careMedical lawEmbeddednessPsychological interventionLawPolitical scienceSocial scienceMedicineNursingPhilosophyArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceEthics in medical practiceBiomedical Ethics and RegulationHealth and Conflict Studies