In this book, Laurence Armand French frames the emergence of medical, clinical, and legal ethical standards within the long history of institutional and systemic racial and gender biases in the United States.
In this book, Laurence Armand French frames the emergence of medical, clinical, and legal ethical standards within the long history of institutional and systemic racial and gender biases in the United States.
Laurence Armand French has a Ph.D. in sociology (criminology)/social psychology from the University of New Hampshire-Durham; a postdoctorate in minorities and criminal justice education from SUNY-Albany; and a Ph.D. in educational psychology and measurement/cultural psychology from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is Professor Emeritus of Psychology from Western New Mexico University and is currently an affiliate professor of justice studies, college of liberal arts, University of New Hampshire. He has also taught at HBCU facilities (Prairie View A&M University; Grambling University) and is widely published in the areas of minorities and social justice.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. Due Process: The Ethics of Social Justice 3. Informed Consent 4. Duty to Disclose 5. Duty to Warn and Report 6. Cruel and Unusual 7. Abuse of Privilege 8. Ethics during the Trump Era
1. Introduction 2. Due Process: The Ethics of Social Justice 3. Informed Consent 4. Duty to Disclose 5. Duty to Warn and Report 6. Cruel and Unusual 7. Abuse of Privilege 8. Ethics during the Trump Era
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