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TARGET ARTICLES

Racism and Bioethics: The Myth of Color Blindness

Pages 28-32 | Published online: 08 Dec 2020
 

Abstract

Like many fields, bioethics has been constrained to thinking to race in terms of colorblindness, the idea that ideal deliberation would ignore race and hence prevent bias. There are practical and ethically significant problems with colorblind approaches to ethical deliberation, and important reasons why race is ethically relevant. Future discourse needs to understand how and why race is relevant in bioethics.

This article is referred to by:
Beyond the Medical Model: Retooling Bioethics for the Work Ahead
Against the Reification of Race in Bioethics: Anti-Racism without Racial Realism
Counteracting COVID-19 Healthcare Inequity: Supporting Antiracist Practices at Bedside
Race-Conscious Bioethics: The Call to Reject Contemporary Scientific Racism
Addressing Meso-Level Mechanisms of Racism in Medicine
Systemic Racism in America and the Call to Action
True Colors: Whiteness in Bioethics
Putting Anti-Racism into Practice as a Healthcare Ethics Consultant
Can a Global Bioethical Lens Engender Color Blindness? An Examination of Public Health Disasters
Addressing Racism in Medicine Requires Tackling the Broader Problem of Epistemic Injustice
Beyond Seeing Race: Centering Racism and Acknowledging Agency Within Bioethics

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