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E-grāmata: Nursing Ethics: Feminist Perspectives

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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Nov-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030491048
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Nov-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030491048

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The aim of this book is to show how feminist perspectives can extend and advance the field of nursing ethics. It engages in the broader nursing ethics project of critiquing existing ethical frameworks as well as constructing and developing alternative understandings, concepts, and methodologies. All of the contributors draw attention to the operations of power inherent in moral relationships at individual, institutional, cultural, and socio-political levels. The early essays chart the development of feminist perspectives in the field of nursing ethics from the late 19th century to the present day and consider the impact of gender roles and gendered understandings on the moral lives of nurses, patients and families. They also consider the transformative potential of feminist perspectives to widen the scope of nursing and midwifery practices to include the social, economic, cultural and political dimensions of moral decision-making in health care settings.  The second half of the book draws on feminist insights to critically discuss the role of nurses and midwives in leadership, healthcare organisations, and research as well as the provision of particular forms of care e.g. care in the home and abortion care. 


Recenzijas

All ten book chapters are written by experienced researchers and lecturers in the field of medical, healthcare and/or feminist ethics, philosophy, care policy and/or law, nursing, etc. Nursing Ethics: Feminist Perspectives is a much welcomed book and should be read by students, academics, professionals, and the broader public to gain a holistic view and deeper understanding of nursing and all its ethical dimensions. (Tijs Vandemeulebroucke, Ethik in der Medizin, Vol. 33, 2021)

Part I Nursing Ethics and Feminist Theoretical Challenges
The Influence of the Social Location of Nurses-as-Women on the Early Development of Nursing Ethics
3(20)
Marsha D. Fowler
1 Introduction
3(1)
2 A Cautious Overview of Nursing in the United States, 1860s--1960s
3(2)
3 The Social Location of Women and Nursing's Professional Beginnings
5(1)
4 The Professionalization of Nursing: Enfranchisement, Education, Regulation
6(3)
5 Introduction to the Nursing Ethics Heritage Literature
9(1)
6 First Wave Nursing Ethics: Elements
10(1)
7 Distinctives of Nursing's Heritage Ethics
11(3)
8 The Nurse to Society Relationship: Two Examples of Enduring Issues
14(1)
8.1 Citizenship and Civic Engagement
14(2)
8.2 Profession and Just Compensation
16(3)
9 Conclusion
19(4)
References
20(3)
An Evolution of Feminist Thought in Nursing Ethics
23(12)
Elizabeth Peter
Joan Liaschenko
1 Introduction
23(1)
2 Early Work
24(2)
3 Centrality of Relationships
26(2)
4 The Ethics of Midwifery and Perinatal Nursing
28(1)
5 Importance of Context
29(2)
6 Conclusion
31(4)
References
32(3)
Piecing Together a Puzzle: Feminist Materialist Philosophy and Nursing Ethics
35(32)
Janice L. Thompson
1 Introduction
35(1)
2 Nancy Fraser's Feminist Materialist Philosophy
36(9)
3 Toward a Critical Theory of Nursing Ethics
45(4)
3.1 Prolegomenon
45(3)
3.2 Is this New?
48(1)
4 Examining the Ethics of Care and Social Justice in Nursing
49(10)
4.1 Ethics of Care in Nursing
49(4)
4.2 Feminist Ethics of Care
53(2)
4.3 The Ethics of Social Justice in Nursing
55(4)
5 Conclusion
59(8)
References
60(7)
Bearing Witness and Testimony in Nursing: An Ethical-Political Practice
67(16)
Christine Ceci
Mikelle Djkowich
Olga Petrovskaya
1 Introduction
67(2)
2 Bearing Witness as a Moral Obligation
69(3)
3 Bearing Witness as Epistemological Practice
72(4)
4 Responding to Testimony: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada
76(1)
5 Beyond "True Presence": Implications for Nurses' Practices
77(2)
6 Conclusion
79(4)
References
80(3)
Intercultural Perspectives
83(10)
Dianne Wepa
1 Introduction
83(1)
2 Pre-colonisation and Gender Roles
84(1)
3 We-dentity and Ethical Decision-Making
85(2)
4 Inter-culturalism, Ethics and Research
87(2)
5 The Personal is Political
89(1)
6 Conclusion
90(3)
References
90(3)
An Interview with Joan Tronto on Care Ethics and Nursing Ethics
93(6)
Joan C. Tronto
Part II Nursing Ethics in Organisation, Clinical Practice, and Research through a Feminist Lens
Organisation Ethics, Relational Leadership and Nursing
99(18)
Louise Campbell
1 Introduction
99(2)
2 Ethical Climate
101(1)
3 Integrity and Values
102(1)
4 Leadership
103(1)
5 Post-heroic Leadership: The Move to Relationality
104(1)
6 The `Feminisation' of Leadership Discourse
105(3)
7 Relational Leadership: Where Does It Lead for Nurses?
108(2)
8 Ethics and Relational Practice
110(1)
9 Moral Distress and Relational Practice
111(1)
10 Conclusion
112(5)
References
113(4)
Hospital Ethics Committees and the Dismissal of Nursing Ethical Concerns: A Feminist Perspective
117(20)
Helen Kohlen
1 Introduction
117(1)
2 Hospital Ethics Committees
118(1)
3 Membership and Nurses' Voices in HECs
119(2)
3.1 Membership
119(1)
3.2 Nurses' Voices
120(1)
4 Beyond the Master Story of Principlism: Feminine Care Ethics and its Feminist Turn
121(5)
4.1 Caring as a Different Voice and Attention to Particularities
121(3)
4.2 The Feminist and Political Turn in Care Ethics
124(2)
5 How Can Feminist Approaches Enrich the Work of Hospital Ethics Committees?
126(6)
5.1 `A Petit Ethical Problem': Using the Warmth of an Older Patient's Belly to Warm up a Blood Bottle
127(3)
5.2 `She Wants to Go Home': An Older Woman Running Away from the Hospital
130(2)
6 Conclusion
132(5)
References
133(4)
Feminist Reflections on Home, Digital Health Technologies, and Ethics
137(12)
Elizabeth Peter
1 Introduction
137(1)
2 The Compatibility of Feminist Ethics and Feminist Relational Geography
138(1)
3 Feminist Ethical and Geographical Insights Regarding the Home
139(1)
4 Digital Health Technologies
139(1)
5 Medicalization and Surveillance
140(1)
6 Privacy
141(1)
7 Autonomy
142(1)
8 Family Caregiving Relationships
143(3)
9 Conclusion
146(3)
References
146(3)
Conscience, Conscientious Objection and Commitment: Midwives, Nurses, and Abortion Care
149(22)
Joan McCarthy
Sheelagh McGuinness
1 Introduction
149(1)
2 Background
150(1)
3 A Standard Account of Conscience
151(5)
3.1 Conscience
151(1)
3.2 Freedom of Conscience
152(1)
3.3 Right of Freedom of Conscience
152(1)
3.4 Conscientious Objection in Healthcare
153(3)
4 A Feminist Account of Conscience
156(9)
4.1 A Relational View of Conscience
156(3)
4.2 Conscientious Commitment
159(2)
4.3 Managing Conscience in Practice
161(4)
5 Conclusion
165(6)
References
166(5)
Feminist Ethics in Nursing Research
171(13)
Heike Felzmann
1 Introduction
171(1)
2 Power in the Ethical Review of Research
172(3)
3 The Vulnerability of Research Participants
175(1)
4 The Autonomy and Agency of Research Participants
176(3)
5 Care for Research Participants
179(2)
6 Trust and Relational Ethics in Research
181(2)
7 Conclusion
183(1)
References 184
Helen Kohlen is Professor of Care Policy and Ethics at the Philosophical-Theological University of Vallendar, Germany and an Adjunct Professor at the University of Alberta, Canada. She is the author of Conflicts of Care: Hospital Ethics Committees in the USA and Germany and co-editor of Moral Boundaries Redrawn: The Significance of Joan Trontos Argument for Political Theory, Professional Ethics, and Care as Practice (with Gert Olthuis, and Jorma Heier). Joan McCarthy is a Senior Lecturer in Healthcare Ethics in the School of Nursing and Midwifery, University College Cork, Ireland, and a Visiting Professor in the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, UK. She is the co-author of Nursing Ethics: Irish Cases and Concerns (with Dolores Dooley) and End-of-Life Care: Ethics and Law (with Mary Donnelly, Dolores Dooley, Louise Campbell, and David Smith).