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Martha Holstein [4]Martha B. Holstein [1]
  1.  13
    Ethics, Aging, and Society: The Critical Turn.Martha Holstein, Jennifer Parks & Mark Waymack - 2010 - Springer Publishing.
    Ethics, Aging and Society...is the first major work in ten years to critically address issues and methodologies in aging and ethics...This well-organized volume begins theoretically and offers new ways of thinking about ethics that can handle the complexities and realities of aging in particular social contexts."--Choice This new research-based book, by experts in the field of ethics, is excellent and much-needed...I challenge you to consider reading this book and seeing all the ways in which you might be forced to rethink (...)
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  2. A looming dystopia: Feminism, aging, and community-based long-term care.Martha Holstein - 2013 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 6 (2):6-35.
    Old age often brings with it chronic conditions that make it difficult to handle the activities of daily life. In the United States, unpaid family caregivers, predominantly women, provide most of this care. I explore why this situation has come about and persists and further ground my image of a dystopian future in neoliberalism, the policymaking process, and contemporary politics. I then offer an ethical and policy foundation for an alternative approach to providing needed long-term care services and make provisional (...)
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  3.  27
    Ethics and Alzheimer’s Disease: Widening the Lens.Martha B. Holstein - 1998 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 9 (1):13-22.
  4.  12
    A Tale for Our Times: From the Bronx to Chicago in 76 Years.Martha Holstein - 2017 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 60 (4):583-594.
    As a feminist scholar, I hold dear the idea that the personal is the political—that is, we alone cannot solve certain problematic features of our lives, especially those features that are widely shared, such as gender, and that our stories are sources of moral and practical knowledge. In this essay, I tell my own story, not because it is necessarily generalizable to all women, not even to women of my age, but because I hope it will deepen awareness of the (...)
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