Seeing the forest through the trees: What the radical feminist critique of prostitution can teach us about the sale of kidneys by living suppliers

International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 6 (1):144-158 (2013)
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Abstract

Recent scholarship suggests that the practices of selling sex and selling kidneys can be understood as examples of serious harms that are sometimes chosen by autonomous individuals who find themselves in difficult straits. This analogy between kidney sales by live suppliers and prostitution deserves careful, rigorous consideration. Ideas about autonomy, paternalism, systemic oppression, commodification, and the human body are at the core of each controversy. This paper seeks to use the well-developed, radical feminist literature opposing prostitution and critiquing the liberal tradition’s account of autonomy to explain why the sale of kidneys by live suppliers should continue to be prohibited in the United States.

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Joseph A. Stramondo
San Diego State University

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Paying for kidneys: The case against prohibition.Michael B. Gill & Robert M. Sade - 2002 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 12 (1):17-45.
Markets and the needy: Organ sales or aid?T. L. Zutlevics - 2001 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (3):297–302.
Commerce in organs: A Kantian critique.Mario Morelli - 1999 - Journal of Social Philosophy 30 (2):315–324.

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