Democratizing the Hospital: Deliberative-Democratic Bioethics
- 1 April 2002
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
- Vol. 27 (2) , 177-212
- https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-27-2-177
Abstract
The increased presence of moral consultants, or bioethicists, within hospitals and clinics in the last two decades has begun to raise questions about their sources of authority and norms of practice. Under pressure from critics in the social sciences, a number of bioethicists have recently raised the ideal of democratic deliberation to defend and reconstruct their place in the medical field. This article sheds light on these developments by placing bioethics in a historical context that shows an early tension between bioethicists as whistle-blowers and bioethicists as incremental reformers of medical practice. This article also develops a conceptual framework for analysis that indicates how such tensions have grown more complicated for contemporary bioethicists because they occupy a fluid and structurally ambiguous role in which there are multiple sources of normative expectations and little guidance for meeting these expectations. The liminality of the role and the overload of expectations have made bioethics vulnerable to methodological criticisms from social scientists. This article concludes that such methodological criticisms cannot address the more systemic problems of liminality and overload. The ideal of democratic deliberation, though imperfect, does address these systemic problems because it shows bioethicists how to gain guidance and share responsibility for moral consultation.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Hastings Center and the Early Years of BioethicsKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, 1999
- Deliberating about BioethicsHastings Center Report, 1997
- Medical Practice and Social AuthorityJournal of Medicine and Philosophy, 1996
- The forms and limits of medical ethicsSocial Science & Medicine, 1994
- Special Supplement: The Birth of BioethicsHastings Center Report, 1993
- Can ethnography save the life of medical ethics?Social Science & Medicine, 1992
- Doing the Right Thing in Cross-Cultural RepresentationThe Predicament of Culture.James CliffordWriting Culture.James Clifford , George E. MarcusWorks and Lives.Clifford GeertzAnthropology as Cultural Critique.George E. Marcus , Michael M. J. FischerEthics, 1992
- ETHICS CONSULTATION AS MORAL ENGAGEMENTBioethics, 1991
- Behind Closed DoorsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Professional EthicsAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1983