Black Markets : The Supply and Demand of Body Parts by Michele Goodwin (2013, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherCambridge University Press
ISBN-101107642752
ISBN-139781107642751
eBay Product ID (ePID)160080673

Product Key Features

Number of Pages314 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameBlack Markets : the Supply and Demand of Body Parts
Publication Year2013
SubjectSurgery / Transplant, Health, General
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaLaw, Medical
AuthorMichele Goodwin
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.7 in
Item Weight15.9 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
Reviews"With her extensive research and graceful prose, Michele Goodwin takes us behind the scenes of the organ transplant industry. Black Markets is a pioneering work that weaves together compelling interviews with patients, gripping health care statistics, fascinating legal cases, and sound policy proposals that could transform health care for everyone." -Lori Andrews, J.D., Professor of Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law and author Sequence, ""Goodwin is the leading scholar and one of a relative few critically analyzing race and medicine today. Goodwin points out a global crisis that deserves very close attention from lawyers, doctors, judges, the community, and religious thinkers. Black Markets is a provocative and highly intelligent book. It brings to light issues that have been kept in the dark for far too long. This book is an outstanding accomplishment for its depth, nuance, and ability to reach so many audiences because of the legacy of 240 years of legal slavery, one hundred years of Jim Crow where access to health care was illegal for blacks. The legacy of high infant mortality rates and shorter life expectancy haunts blacks even today. This book delves into matters too long ignored. Blacks work harder and make less, pay more for less, live under stress and don't live as long. Professor Goodwin is to be hailed for the quality of her scholarship and academic excellence in Black Markets. Black Markets should be on the shelves of all people who care about the future of biotechnology."" -Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr., Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalition, "Goodwin is the leading scholar and one of a relative few critically analyzing race and medicine today. Goodwin points out a global crisis that deserves very close attention from lawyers, doctors, judges, the community, and religious thinkers. Black Markets is a provocative and highly intelligent book. It brings to light issues that have been kept in the dark for far too long. This book is an outstanding accomplishment for its depth, nuance, and ability to reach so many audiences because of the legacy of 240 years of legal slavery, one hundred years of Jim Crow where access to health care was illegal for blacks. The legacy of high infant mortality rates and shorter life expectancy haunts blacks even today. This book delves into matters too long ignored. Blacks work harder and make less, pay more for less, live under stress and don't live as long. Professor Goodwin is to be hailed for the quality of her scholarship and academic excellence in Black Markets. Black Markets should be on the shelves of all people who care about the future of biotechnology." Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr, Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalition, From the pillaging a century ago of Black graves to the recent sale of Alistair Cooke's bones to a tissue bank by rogue New York morticians a black market in body parts has been an unspoken but flourishing way of securing human organs and tissue. Michele Goodwin's exploration of the legal, ethical and commercial aspects of this industry” is a macabre and fascinating study of how our present system of altruistic donation” has failed to meet the need for such materials. Her proposal for a controlled market restricted to cadaveric organs is a change in public policy designed to meet demand without seducing the poor into selling their body parts.” John J. Paris, S.J. Walsh Professor of Bioethics at Boston College, "Goodwin thorough analysis and proposal offer a great contribution to a pressing public health issue that can no longer be ignored." -JILP, "Black Markets powerfully exposes the fraud, bias, and commercialism that plague our supposedly altruistic system of organ donation. Goodwin places the needs and views of African Americans - those hurt most by the current system -- squarely at the center of her project. Her daring proposal will cause readers to rethink not only organ donation but the nature of altruism itself.”" Dorothy Roberts, Kirkland and Ellis, Professor of Law, Northwestern University Law School and author of Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty, " Goodwin is the leading scholar and one of a relative few critically analyzing race and medicine today. Goodwin points out a global crisis that deserves very close attention from lawyers, doctors, judges, the community, and religious thinkers. Black Markets is a provocative and highly intelligent book. It brings to light issues that have been kept in the dark for far too long. This book is an outstanding accomplishment for its depth, nuance, and ability to reach so many audiences because of the legacy of 240 years of legal slavery, one hundred years of Jim Crow where access to health care was illegal for blacks. The legacy of high infant mortality rates and shorter life expectancy haunts blacks even today. This book delves into matters too long ignored. Blacks work harder and make less, pay more for less, live under stress and don't live as long. Professor Goodwin is to be hailed for the quality of her scholarship and academic excellence in Black Markets. Black Markets should be on the shelves of all people who care about the future of biotechnology. " Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalition, ""In Black Markets: The Supply and Demand of Body Parts, Michele Goodwin provides an interesting and provocative look at the brave new world of human organ and tissue donation and transplantation. Professor Goodwin explores the many legal and ethical dilemmas that surround this subject, and her wide-ranging research places these issues in their historical, legal, and cultural contexts. Her book provides a thorough and insightful critique of our present-day altruistic system of donation, and she proposes, and ably defends, an alternative system that would combine elements of altruism and compensation. Black Markets is an important contribution to the field and is certain to help shape the debate on these questions in years to come."" -Benjamin K. Miller, Former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Illinois, "While everyone may dream of being a hero, when it comes to giving away organs, the reality is starkly different. Despite multi-million dollar publicity campaigns, not enough individuals make the Gift of Life.” The gap between organ supply and demand continues to grow exponentially. These numbers don't lie, and Michele Goodwin is not afraid of the truth. In her provocative book, she reveals how exclusive reliance on altruistic donations has failed, disproportionately affecting African American patients. As she sheds light onto the current organ procurement system and examines alternatives - from compelled donations to presumed consent and the black market- she finds more exploitation and racial bias. Her solution is bold. The business of savings lives can thrive if we let tissues and cadaveric organs enter the market place and regulate their sales. It takes courage to read this book. As a reward, readers will better understand the historical roots of the problem, and the challenge it presents to the legal system and to our moral assumptions.”" Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Association, ""Goodwin is the leading scholar and one of a relative few critically analyzing race and medicine today. Goodwin points out a global crisis that deserves very close attention from lawyers, doctors, judges, the community, and religious thinkers. Black Markets is a provocative and highly intelligent book. It brings to light issues that have been kept in the dark for far too long. This book is an outstanding accomplishment for its depth, nuance, and ability to reach so many audiences because of the legacy of 240 years of legal slavery, one hundred years of Jim Crow where access to health care was illegal for blacks. The legacy of high infant mortality rates and shorter life expectancy haunts blacks even today. This book delves into matters too long ignored. Blacks work harder and make less, pay more for less, live under stress and don't live as long. Professor Goodwin is to be hailed for the quality of her scholarship and academic excellence in Black Markets. Black Markets should be on the shelves of all people who care about the future of biotechnology."" Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr, Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalitionwho care about the future of biotechnology."" Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr, Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalitionwho care about the future of biotechnology."" Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr, Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalitionwho care about the future of biotechnology."" Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, Sr, Founder and President, Rainbow PUSH Coalition, "For many years I and many others in the law and economics movement have urged in vain that a blind faith in altruism leads to a senseless loss in human lives that only a legalized market in organ transplants can overcome. Our chosen tools of analysis have been supply and demand curves. It is therefore heartening to see how Michele Goodwin's all too human take on this burning issue reaches the same conclusion. When the classical economist and the modern race theorist both reach the same conclusion, maybe, just maybe, the bureaucrats who run our sclerotic system of organ transplants will take heed— before more lives are ruined or lost.”" Richard A. Epstein, James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago, "This book says important things to lawyers, doctors, and others interested in healthcare law and bioethics. Recommended for academic libraries." Library Journal, "A remarkable, fresh analysis of a difficult and terrible public health issue. I could not put the book down."” Donna E. Shalala, former Secretary of Health and Human Services, Acirc;""Black Markets powerfully exposes the fraud, bias, and commercialism that plague our supposedly altruistic system of organ donation. Goodwin places the needs and views of African Americans - those hurt most by the current system Acirc; squarely at the center of her project. Her daring proposal will cause readers to rethink not only organ donation but the nature of altruism itself.Acirc;" <br/<-Dorothy Roberts, Kirkland and Ellis, Professor of Law, Northwestern University Law School, author of Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty, "Black Markets is impeccably researched and persuasively argued...Goodwin's book provides provocative and insightful material with which to continue the conversation about transplant policy." -Barbara A. Noah, Western New England College School of Law, The Law and Politics Book Review, ""Black Markets powerfully exposes the fraud, bias, and commercialism that plague our supposedly altruistic system of organ donation. Goodwin places the needs and views of African Americans - those hurt most by the current system -- squarely at the center of her project. Her daring proposal will cause readers to rethink not only organ donation but the nature of altruism itself." -Dorothy Roberts, Kirkland and Ellis, Professor of Law, Northwestern University Law School, author of Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty, "This exceptional book is a rational and well-referenced treatise." James F. Trotter, MD, The New England Journal of Medicine, "From the pillaging a century ago of Black graves to the recent sale of Alistair Cooke's bones to a tissue bank by rogue New York morticians a black market in body parts has been an unspoken but flourishing way of securing human organs and tissue. Michele Goodwin's exploration of the legal, ethical and commercial aspects of this industry” is a macabre and fascinating study of how our present system of altruistic donation” has failed to meet the need for such materials. Her proposal for a controlled market restricted to cadaveric organs is a change in public policy designed to meet demand without seducing the poor into selling their body parts.”" -John J. Paris, S. J. Walsh Professor of Bioethics, Boston College, "Goodwin thorough analysis and proposal offer a great contribution to a pressing public health issue that can no longer be ignored." New York University Journal of International Law and Politics, "This exceptional book is a rational and well-referenced treatise." -James F. Trotter, M.D., The New England Journal of Medicine, "In Black Markets: The Supply and Demand of Body Parts, Michele Goodwin provides an interesting and provocative look at the brave new world of human organ and tissue donation and transplantation. Professor Goodwin explores the many legal and ethical dilemmas that surround this subject, and her wide-ranging research places these issues in their historical, legal, and cultural contexts. Her book provides a thorough and insightful critique of our present-day altruistic system of donation, and she proposes, and ably defends, an alternative system that would combine elements of altruism and compensation. Black Markets is an important contribution to the field and is certain to help shape the debate on these questions in years to come.”" Benjamin K. Miller, Former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Illinois, "Black Markets is a fascinating look at an issue fraught with social, ethical, and legal challenges. Michele Goodwin is an academic, and her work reads as such, with a plethora of sources and statistics to back up her assertions ... Black Markets is a useful addition to any academic law library's collection on health care law." Stephanie Karnosh, Reference Librarian, McMillan LLP, While everyone may dream of being a hero, when it comes to giving away organs, the reality is starkly different. Despite multi-million dollar publicity campaigns, not enough individuals make the Gift of Life. The gap between organ supply and demand continues to grow exponentially. These numbers don't lie, and Michele Goodwin is not afraid of the truth. In her provocative book, she reveals how exclusive reliance on altruistic donations has failed, disproportionately affecting African American patients. As she sheds light onto the current organ procurement system and examines alternatives from compelled donations to presumed consent and the black market she finds more exploitation and racial bias. Her solution is bold. The business of savings lives can thrive if we let tissues and cadaveric organs enter the market place and regulate their sales. It takes courage to read this book. As a reward, readers will better understand the historical roots of the problem, and the challenge it presents to the legal system and to our moral assumptions. Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Association, "With her extensive research and graceful prose, Michele Goodwin takes us behind the scenes of the organ transplant industry. Black Markets is a pioneering work that weaves together compelling interviews with patients, gripping health care statistics, fascinating legal cases, and sound policy proposals that could transform health care for everyone." <br/<-Lori Andrews, J.D., Professor of Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law and author Sequence, "A remarkable, fresh analysis of a difficult and terrible public health issue. I could not put the book down."" -Donna E. Shalala, former Secretary of Health and Human Services, For many years I and many others in the law and economics movement have urged in vain that a blind faith in altruism leads to a senseless loss in human lives that only a legalized market in organ transplants can overcome. Our chosen tools of analysis have been supply and demand curves. It is therefore heartening to see how Michele Goodwin's all too human take on this burning issue reaches the same conclusion. When the classical economist and the modern race theorist both reach the same conclusion, maybe, just maybe, the bureaucrats who run our sclerotic system of organ transplants will take heed— before more lives are ruined or lost.” Richard A. Epstein James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago, In Black Markets: The Supply and Demand of Body Parts, Michele Goodwin provides an interesting and provocative look at the brave new world of human organ and tissue donation and transplantation. Professor Goodwin explores the many legal and ethical dilemmas that surround this subject, and her wide-ranging research places these issues in their historical, legal, and cultural contexts. Her book provides a thorough and insightful critique of our present-day altruistic system of donation, and she proposes, and ably defends, an alternative system that would combine elements of altruism and compensation. Black Markets is an important contribution to the field and is certain to help shape the debate on these questions in years to come. Benjamin K. Miller, Former Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Illinois, "This exceptional book is a rational and well-referenced treatise." James F. Trotter, M.D., The New England Journal of Medicine, ""While everyone may dream of being a hero, when it comes to giving away organs, the reality is starkly different. Despite multi-million dollar publicity campaigns, not enough individuals make the "Gift of Life." The gap between organ supply and demand continues to grow exponentially. These numbers don't lie, and Michele Goodwin is not afraid of the truth. In her provocative book, she reveals how exclusive reliance on altruistic donations has failed, disproportionately affecting African American patients. As she sheds light onto the current organ procurement system and examines alternatives -- from compelled donations to presumed consent and the black market -- she finds more exploitation and racial bias. Her solution is bold. The business of savings lives can thrive if we let tissues and cadaveric organs enter the market place and regulate their sales. It takes courage to read this book. As a reward, readers will better understand the historical roots of the problem, and the challenge it presents to the legal system and to our moral assumptions."" -Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Association, "Black Markets is impeccably researched and persuasively argued ... Goodwin's book provides provocative and insightful material with which to continue the conversation about transplant policy." Barbara A. Noah, The Law and Politics Book Review, ""For many years I and many others in the law and economics movement have urged in vain that a blind faith in altruism leads to a senseless loss in human lives that only a legalized market in organ transplants can overcome. Our chosen tools of analysis have been supply and demand curves. It is therefore heartening to see how Michele Goodwin's all too human take on this burning issue reaches the same conclusion. When the classical economist and the modern race theorist both reach the same conclusion, maybe, just maybe, the bureaucrats who run our sclerotic system of organ transplants will take heed-- before more lives are ruined or lost."" -Richard A. Epstein, James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago, "This book says important things to lawyers, doctors, and others interested in healthcare law and bioethics. Recommended for academic libraries." -Library Journal, ""From the pillaging a century ago of Black graves to the recent sale of Alistair Cooke's bones to a tissue bank by rogue New York morticians a black market in body parts has been an unspoken but flourishing way of securing human organs and tissue. Michele Goodwin's exploration of the legal, ethical and commercial aspects of this "industry" is a macabre and fascinating study of how our present system of "altruistic donation" has failed to meet the need for such materials. Her proposal for a controlled market restricted to cadaveric organs is a change in public policy designed to meet demand without seducing the poor into selling their body parts."" -John J. Paris, S.J. Walsh Professor of Bioethics at Boston College, ""While everyone may dream of being a hero, when it comes to giving away organs, the reality is starkly different. Despite multi-million dollar publicity campaigns, not enough individuals make the "Gift of Life." The gap between organ supply and demand continues to grow exponentially. These numbers don't lie, and Michele Goodwin is not afraid of the truth. In her provocative book, she reveals how exclusive reliance on altruistic donations has failed, disproportionately affecting African American patients. As she sheds light onto the current organ procurement system and examines alternatives - from compelled donations to presumed consent and the black market- she finds more exploitation and racial bias. Her solution is bold. The business of savings lives can thrive if we let tissues and cadaveric organs enter the market place and regulate their sales. It takes courage to read this book. As a reward, readers will better understand the historical roots of the problem, and the challenge it presents to the legal system and to our moral assumptions."" Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Associationystem and to our moral assumptions."" Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Associationystem and to our moral assumptions."" Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Associationystem and to our moral assumptions."" Karine Morin, LLM, Director, Ethics Policy, Ethics Group, American Medical Association, "With her extensive research and graceful prose, Michele Goodwin takes us behind the scenes of the organ transplant industry. Black Markets is a pioneering work that weaves together compelling interviews with patients, gripping health care statistics, fascinating legal cases, and sound policy proposals that could transform health care for everyone." Lori Andrews, JD, Professor of Law, Chicago-Kent College of Law and author of Sequence
Dewey Edition22
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal362.19/79500688
Table Of Content1. Introduction; Part I: 2. Institutional supply and demand; 3. Nuances, judicial authority, and legal limits of altruism; 4. Equal opportunity rationing: racial and economic disparities; Part II. Legal Frameworks and Alternatives: 5. The legal process of procurement and allocation: regulatory frame; 6. Presumed consent; 7. Commodification; Part III: 8. Tissue sales: an African American predicament?: critiquing the slavery and black body market comparison; 9. The private and public financial transaction in tissue transplantation; 10. African Americans and organ sales; 11. Conclusion.
SynopsisIn America, in direct response to indefinite delays on the national transplantation waitlists and an inadequate supply of organs, a growing number of terminally ill Americans are turning to international underground markets and coordinators or brokers for organs. Chinese inmates on death-row and the economically disadvantaged in India and Brazil are the often compromised co-participants in the private negotiation process, which occurs outside the legal process - or in the shadows of law. These individuals supply kidneys and other organs for Americans and other Westerners willing to shop and pay in the private process. This book contends that exclusive reliance on the present altruistic tissue and organ procurement processes in the United States is not only rife with problems, but also improvident. The author explores how the altruistic approach leads to a 'black market' of organs being harvested from Third World individuals as well as compelled donations from children and incompetent persons., In direct response to indefinite delays on the national transplantation waitlists and an inadequate supply of organs, a growing number of terminally ill Americans are turning to international underground markets and brokers for organs. Offering a contemporary view of organ and tissue supply and demand, Michele Goodwin explores the legal, racial and social nuances of current altruistic institutionalized procurement schemes. It is understandably not publicized that Chinese inmates sitting on death row and the economically disadvantaged in India and Brazil are the most often compromised co-participants in the negotiation process and supply kidney and other organs for Americans as well as other Westerners willing to shop and pay in the shadow of the law. Goodwin suggests that the best alternative model for organ procurement is a market approach or one based on presumed consent and provides an alternative way of studying how to increase the supply of organs and other body parts as well., This book contends that exclusive reliance on the present altruistic tissue and organ procurement processes in the US is not only rife with problems, but also improvident. The author explores how the altruistic approach leads to a 'black market' of organs being harvested from Third World individuals.
LC Classification NumberRD129.5.G66 2013

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