Critics of a regulated market in organs have correctly focussed on its inability to protect the vendor from coercion and exploitation. However, they have consistently failed to realise that coercion and exploitation are not immanent in this market. Rather, they are immanent in the need to even consider selling ones organs (free people do not engage in such considerations). In other words, the critics have failed to acknowledge that a regulated market in organs should, at least theoretically, be able to protect the vendor from coercion and exploitation that might occur within the sphere of exchange, but it cannot protect the vendor, not even theoretically, from coercion and exploitation that occur universally outside this sphere. Even worse,...
This paper considers two arguments that are common in the literature on organ sales. First, organ sa...
‘Imposing options on people in poverty: the harm of a live donor organ market’ Janet Radcliffe-Richa...
The legalization of markets in human organs would save lives. Human lives matter. Therefore, weshoul...
Each day, an average of eighteen people die in the United States while waiting for an organ transpla...
For over twenty years, human live-organ sales have been banned in the United States and most of the ...
The current system of organ procurement which relies on donation is inadequate to the current and fu...
One of the most hotly debated issues in contemporary applied and practical philosophy is whether ind...
Should we be allowed to sell blood, or kidneys? The standard answer is no. A broad consensus in inte...
A prominent defence of a market in organs from living donors says that if we truly care about people...
letting individuals choose whether to sell kidneys or other organs as living donors, and I argued th...
The article considers the objection to a commercial market in living donor organs for transplantatio...
The article considers the objection to a commercial market in living donor organs for transplantatio...
Despite stringent and fine tuned laws most jurisdictions are not able to curb organ trafficking. Nor...
This article concerns the morality of establishing regulated kidney markets in an effort to reduce t...
This study examines arguments for and against the sale of human organs for transplantation by explor...
This paper considers two arguments that are common in the literature on organ sales. First, organ sa...
‘Imposing options on people in poverty: the harm of a live donor organ market’ Janet Radcliffe-Richa...
The legalization of markets in human organs would save lives. Human lives matter. Therefore, weshoul...
Each day, an average of eighteen people die in the United States while waiting for an organ transpla...
For over twenty years, human live-organ sales have been banned in the United States and most of the ...
The current system of organ procurement which relies on donation is inadequate to the current and fu...
One of the most hotly debated issues in contemporary applied and practical philosophy is whether ind...
Should we be allowed to sell blood, or kidneys? The standard answer is no. A broad consensus in inte...
A prominent defence of a market in organs from living donors says that if we truly care about people...
letting individuals choose whether to sell kidneys or other organs as living donors, and I argued th...
The article considers the objection to a commercial market in living donor organs for transplantatio...
The article considers the objection to a commercial market in living donor organs for transplantatio...
Despite stringent and fine tuned laws most jurisdictions are not able to curb organ trafficking. Nor...
This article concerns the morality of establishing regulated kidney markets in an effort to reduce t...
This study examines arguments for and against the sale of human organs for transplantation by explor...
This paper considers two arguments that are common in the literature on organ sales. First, organ sa...
‘Imposing options on people in poverty: the harm of a live donor organ market’ Janet Radcliffe-Richa...
The legalization of markets in human organs would save lives. Human lives matter. Therefore, weshoul...