Ethics Expertise and Public Credibility: A Case Study of the Ethical Principle of Justice

Science, Technology, and Human Values 41 (4):709-731 (2016)
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Abstract

In recent years, scholars in science and technology studies have examined the advice that experts make for the governance of biomedicine. This STS scholarship, however, has not yet explained how the credibility of ethics expertise in public bioethics is produced from particular conditions and extended to different settings. This article describes how a bioethics commission created the ethical principle of justice and examines how the ethics expertise established public credibility on the justice principle. The findings suggest that the principle of justice was first explored as the diverse concepts of “equality” with reference to the review of fetal research, redefined as “fairness” or “desert” from theoretical viewpoints, and then circulated as a standard framework in local settings. The credibility of ethics expertise, based on the coproduction of material and moral orders, was made possible by reaching common ground among different data, principles, and background theories.

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Yoshio Nukaga
Sophia University

References found in this work

Principles of biomedical ethics.Tom L. Beauchamp - 1979 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by James F. Childress.
The birth of bioethics.Albert R. Jonsen - 1998 - New York: Oxford University Press.
Rethinking Expertise.Harry Collins & Robert Evans - 2007 - University of Chicago Press.

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