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The Ethics of Infant Male Circumcision

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Uehiro Oxford Institute
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In this talk, I argue that non-therapeutic circumcision of infants is unethical, whether performed for reasons of obtaining possible future health benefits, for reasons of cultural transmission, or for reasons of perceived religious obligation.
In this talk, I argue that the non-therapeutic circumcision of infant males is unethical, whether it is performed for reasons of obtaining possible future health benefits, for reasons of cultural transmission, or for reasons of perceived religious obligation. I begin with the premise that it should be considered morally impermissible to sever healthy, functional genital tissue from another person's body without first asking for, and then actually receiving, that person's informed consent-otherwise, this action would qualify as a criminal assault. I then raise a number of possible exceptions to this rule, to see whether they could reasonably serve to justify the practice of infant male circumcision in certain cases. First, what if it could be established that the risk of contracting certain diseases might be diminished by removing a person's foreskin in infancy, as is often suggested in the United States? Second, what if circumcision could be shown to reduce the spread of AIDS in African populations with high transmission rates of HIV? Third, what if the infant's parents believed that they had a cultural or a religious obligation to remove the foreskin from his penis before he was old enough to give his consent? After discussing the merits of these considerations as possible "exceptions" to the ethical premise with which I will have begun my talk, I go on to conclude that they do not present compelling justifications for circumcision before the boy is old enough to understand what is at stake in such a surgery and to decide for himself whether he would like to part with his own foreskin. I conclude with a discussion of the similarities and differences between male and female forms of genital cutting, and I argue that anyone who is committed to the view that infant male circumcision is morally permissible must also accept the moral permissibility of some (though not all) forms of female genital cutting. However, as I argue, neither type of cutting should be allowed absent clear consent of the individual and/or strict medical necessity.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Brian Earp
Keywords
circumcision
medical consent
ethics
infants
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 27/06/2013
Duration: 00:52:46

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Annual Lecture in Law and Society: Law and Social Illusion

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Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
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Professor Liam B Murphy, Herbert Peterfreund Professor of Law and Philosophy at New York University School of Law gives the 2013 Annual Lecture in Law and Society.
In the wake of the House of Commons Debate on tax fairness and increasing public outrage at tax avoidance by Google and other multinationals, Professor Murphy will assess how misunderstandings of the ethical bases of the central legal institutions of a market economy badly distorts political debate on tax and other issues of social justice. Unlike some other parts of the law, the law of property and contract cannot plausibly be understood as attempts to enforce moral rights and duties that legal subjects have naturally, independently of law. They must be understood as Hume understood them: The legal rules of property and contract are artificial, or conventional, in that their justification lies in their effects on overall social welfare and justice. Once the law of property and contract are established, however, it is hard not to think of them as directly reflecting real rights and duties. The law of the market encourages a kind of everyday libertarianism in social attitudes. This illusion leads us to believe, for example, that pre-tax income and wealth represent moral entitlements that should be used as a baseline in discussions of tax justice. The common criteria of tax fairness - vertical and horizontal equity - demand that those with more pre-tax income pay proportionately more tax, and that those with the same pre-tax income pay the same. But justice is not a matter of applying some equitable-seeming functions to a morally arbitrary initial distribution. The social illusion generated by the law of the market also distorts political discussion of contract. Everyday libertarianism lies behind the idea of freedom of contract. More surprising, it misleads some economic analysts of law, who would be the first to insist on the conventional nature of the law of contract. 

Episode Information

Series
Foundation for Law, Justice and Society
People
Liam B Murphy
Keywords
Google
equality
economics
tax
society
politics
ethics
law
Department: Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Date Added: 27/06/2013
Duration: 01:03:33

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Dr Carl Heneghan and John Balla discuss the evidence relating to diagnostics

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Kellogg College
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Dr Carl Heneghan and John Balla discuss the evidence relating to diagnostics.
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Kellogg College
People
Carl Heneghan
John Balla
Department: Kellogg College
Date Added: 26/06/2013
Duration: 00:39:03

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Dr Carl Heneghan and John Balla discuss the evidence relating to diagnostics

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Dr Carl Heneghan and John Balla discuss the evidence relating to diagnostics.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Carl Heneghan
John Balla
Keywords
diagnostics
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 26/06/2013
Duration: 00:39:03

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The Global Health Network

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Translational and Clinical
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Dr Trudie Lang tells us how the Global Health Network facilitates collaboration and resource sharing.
Clinical trials establish the evidence base for prevention and treatment of disease and are critically important in the field of Global Health. Dr Trudie Lang leads the Global Health Clinical Trials group, which aims to promote and improve the conduct of non-commercial clinical research across all diseases in resource-poor settings.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Translational and Clinical
People
Trudie Lang
Keywords
trial design
informed consent
regulation
clinical trials
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine
Date Added: 26/06/2013
Duration: 00:06:26

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The Global Health Network

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Translational Medicine
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Dr Trudie Lang tells us how the Global Health Network facilitates collaboration and resource sharing.
Clinical trials establish the evidence base for prevention and treatment of disease and are critically important in the field of Global Health. Dr Trudie Lang leads the Global Health Clinical Trials group, which aims to promote and improve the conduct of non-commercial clinical research across all diseases in resource-poor settings.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Translational Medicine
People
Trudie Lang
Keywords
trial design
informed consent
regulation
clinical trials
Department: Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine
Date Added: 26/06/2013
Duration: 00:06:26

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2013 Carnegie-Uehiro-Oxford Ethics Conference: Happiness and Well-Being

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2013 Carnegie-Uehiro-Oxford Ethics Conference:  Happiness and Well-Being
Many people and countries are now beginning to evaluate the success of their lives or society not purely in terms of money or gross domestic product. The currency of traditional economics - preference satisfaction - has fallen into question as an ethical value. The global financial crisis is seen by many as a failure of capitalism. Some countries have proposed a Gross Happiness Index to replace GDP as the measure of the productivity of a country. What is of intrinsic value in human lives? How should we measure how good a human being's life is? What is happiness and what constitutes well-being? What can we learn from religion, philosophy, economics and the cognitive sciences about happiness and well-being? Are happiness and well-being relative to culture? What roles do pleasure and happiness play in ethics? Should we aim to maximise happiness and pleasure? How should the views of people with disability be incorporated into an ethics of well-being? Jointly organised by The Uehiro Foundation on Ethics and Education (Tokyo), The Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs (New York) and Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics (University of Oxford) this conference will seek to understand the nature and value of happiness and well-being in practical ethics.

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The Village in the Jungle as colonial memoir: Woolf writing home

Series
The Leonard Woolf Symposium
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Victoria Glendinning (biographer of Leonard Woolf) Introduced by Hermione Lee (biographer of Virginia Woolf) gives the closing plenary for the The Leonard Woolf Symposium.

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Series
The Leonard Woolf Symposium
People
Victoria Glendinning
Hermione Lee
Keywords
woolf symposium
Colonialism
leonard woolf
literature
humanities
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 24/06/2013
Duration: 00:35:07

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The Village in the Jungle Roundtable

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The Leonard Woolf Symposium
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A discussion of key passages from Leonard (and possibly Virginia) Woolf, led by Hermione Lee (Oxford), Anna Snaith (KCL), Elleke Boehmer (Oxford), David Trotter (Cambridge), Susheila Nasta (OU), Nisha Manocha (Wolfson).

Episode Information

Series
The Leonard Woolf Symposium
People
Hermione Lee
Anna Snaith
Elleke Boehmer
David Trotter
Susheila Nasta
Nisha Manocha
Keywords
woolf symposium
Colonialism
leonard woolf
literature
humanities
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 24/06/2013
Duration: 00:45:13

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Indigenous Tradition and the Western Imagination: Leonard Woolf's The Village in the Jungle

Series
The Leonard Woolf Symposium
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Chandani Lokuge (Monash University, Australia) gives the opening keynote talk for the Leonard Woolf's The Village in the Jungle symposium.

Episode Information

Series
The Leonard Woolf Symposium
People
Chandani Lokuge
Keywords
woolf symposium
Colonialism
leonard woolf
literature
humanities
Department: Wolfson College
Date Added: 24/06/2013
Duration: 00:49:13

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