The Public Shaping of Medical Research (eBook, ePUB)
Patient Associations, Health Movements and Biomedicine
Redaktion: Wehling, Peter; Koenen, Sophia; Viehöver, Willy
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The Public Shaping of Medical Research (eBook, ePUB)
Patient Associations, Health Movements and Biomedicine
Redaktion: Wehling, Peter; Koenen, Sophia; Viehöver, Willy
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Patient organizations and social health movements offer an illuminating example of civil society engagement and participation in scientific research.
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Patient organizations and social health movements offer an illuminating example of civil society engagement and participation in scientific research.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 308
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. November 2014
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317584469
- Artikelnr.: 41940606
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 308
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. November 2014
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317584469
- Artikelnr.: 41940606
Peter Wehling Peter Wehling currently is senior researcher at the Institute of Sociology at Goethe-University, Frankfurt/Main (Germany); until the end of 2013 he directed the research project "Participatory Governance of Science" at the University of Augsburg. His research interests include science and technology studies, sociology of knowledge and ignorance, sociology of health and illness, and sociological theory and critical sociology. Among his recent publications are: Entgrenzung der Medizin, co-edited with Willy Viehöver, Bielefeld 2011; Fighting a losing battle? The right not to know and the dynamics of biomedical knowledge production, in M. Gross and L. McGoey (eds) Routledge International Handbook of Ignorance Studies, London/New York, forthcoming Willy Viehöver Willy Viehöver is a senior researcher at the University of Augsburg (Germany) and currently visiting professor at the Department of Sociology. His main research interests include discourse and narrative analysis, qualitative social research, sociology of health and illness, policy analysis, science and technology studies, sociology of knowledge, and sociological theory. His recent publications include: Governing the Planetary Greenhouse in Spite of Scientific Uncertainty, which appeared in Science, Technology & Innovation Studies, 6(2), in 2010, and: Zivilgesellschaft und Wissenschaft - Ein Spannungsfeld zwischen Konflikt und Kooperation, co-authored with Peter Wehling, which appeared in Sozialwissenschaften und Berufspraxis (SuB), 35(2), in 2010 Sophia Koenen Sophia Koenen is currently working at the Department of Medical Sociology at the University of Regensburg as a researcher and teacher of undergraduate studies. She is involved in an interdisciplinary project on the public communication of genetic risk factors of widespread diseases, specifically Age Related Macular Degeneration (AMD). Until the end of 2013, Sophia Koenen was part of the research project "Participatory Governance of Science" at the Institute of Sociology at Augsburg University. She successfully earned her Master of Arts at the University of Augsburg in March 2014. Her scientific interest focuses on qualitative research in sociology of health and illness
Introduction: Patient Associations, Health Social Movements and the Public
Shaping of Biomedical Research: An Introduction Part 1: Empirical Cases and
Theoretical Perspectives 1. A Seat at the Table, "a Lab of Our Own" and
Working with What We Know Now: How the U.S. Environmental Breast Cancer
Movement Shapes Research 2. Initiating and Funding Medical Research on a
Rare Disease: The Approach of the German Cystic Fibrosis Association 3.
EURORDIS: Empowering Patients Living with Rare Diseases to Participate in
Biomedical Knowledge Production 4. The Entanglement of Scientific and
Political Claims: Towards a New Form of Patients' Activism 5. Obesity, the
Alternative Food Movement, and Complete Streets: New Forms of 'Patient'
Activism and the Evolution of Health Social Movements Part 2: Shifting
Contexts and New Challenges 6. Autism, the Internet and Medicalization 7. A
Community Fractured: Canada's Breast Cancer Movement, Pharmaceutical
Company Funding, and Science-Related Advocacy 8. Beyond Scientific
Controversies: Scientific Counterpublics, Countervailing Industries, and
Undone Science 9. Interpellating Patients as Future Users of Biomedical
Technologies: The Case of Patient Associations and Stem Cell Research 10.
Patient Organizations as Biosocial Communities? Conceptual Clarifications
and Critical Remarks Part 3: Democratizing Biomedicine? The Role of Patient
Associations and Health Social Movements 11. Changing Contexts for Science
and Society Interaction: From Deficit to Dialogue, from Dialogue to
Participation- and beyond? 12. The Virtues (and Some Perils) of Activist
Participation: The Political and Epistemic Legitimacy of Patient Activism
13. The Ethical Legitimacy of Patient Organizations' Involvement in
Politics and Knowledge Production: Epistemic Justice as a Conceptual Basis
14. Conclusion: Effects of and Challenges to the Public Shaping of Medical
Research
Shaping of Biomedical Research: An Introduction Part 1: Empirical Cases and
Theoretical Perspectives 1. A Seat at the Table, "a Lab of Our Own" and
Working with What We Know Now: How the U.S. Environmental Breast Cancer
Movement Shapes Research 2. Initiating and Funding Medical Research on a
Rare Disease: The Approach of the German Cystic Fibrosis Association 3.
EURORDIS: Empowering Patients Living with Rare Diseases to Participate in
Biomedical Knowledge Production 4. The Entanglement of Scientific and
Political Claims: Towards a New Form of Patients' Activism 5. Obesity, the
Alternative Food Movement, and Complete Streets: New Forms of 'Patient'
Activism and the Evolution of Health Social Movements Part 2: Shifting
Contexts and New Challenges 6. Autism, the Internet and Medicalization 7. A
Community Fractured: Canada's Breast Cancer Movement, Pharmaceutical
Company Funding, and Science-Related Advocacy 8. Beyond Scientific
Controversies: Scientific Counterpublics, Countervailing Industries, and
Undone Science 9. Interpellating Patients as Future Users of Biomedical
Technologies: The Case of Patient Associations and Stem Cell Research 10.
Patient Organizations as Biosocial Communities? Conceptual Clarifications
and Critical Remarks Part 3: Democratizing Biomedicine? The Role of Patient
Associations and Health Social Movements 11. Changing Contexts for Science
and Society Interaction: From Deficit to Dialogue, from Dialogue to
Participation- and beyond? 12. The Virtues (and Some Perils) of Activist
Participation: The Political and Epistemic Legitimacy of Patient Activism
13. The Ethical Legitimacy of Patient Organizations' Involvement in
Politics and Knowledge Production: Epistemic Justice as a Conceptual Basis
14. Conclusion: Effects of and Challenges to the Public Shaping of Medical
Research
Introduction: Patient Associations, Health Social Movements and the Public
Shaping of Biomedical Research: An Introduction Part 1: Empirical Cases and
Theoretical Perspectives 1. A Seat at the Table, "a Lab of Our Own" and
Working with What We Know Now: How the U.S. Environmental Breast Cancer
Movement Shapes Research 2. Initiating and Funding Medical Research on a
Rare Disease: The Approach of the German Cystic Fibrosis Association 3.
EURORDIS: Empowering Patients Living with Rare Diseases to Participate in
Biomedical Knowledge Production 4. The Entanglement of Scientific and
Political Claims: Towards a New Form of Patients' Activism 5. Obesity, the
Alternative Food Movement, and Complete Streets: New Forms of 'Patient'
Activism and the Evolution of Health Social Movements Part 2: Shifting
Contexts and New Challenges 6. Autism, the Internet and Medicalization 7. A
Community Fractured: Canada's Breast Cancer Movement, Pharmaceutical
Company Funding, and Science-Related Advocacy 8. Beyond Scientific
Controversies: Scientific Counterpublics, Countervailing Industries, and
Undone Science 9. Interpellating Patients as Future Users of Biomedical
Technologies: The Case of Patient Associations and Stem Cell Research 10.
Patient Organizations as Biosocial Communities? Conceptual Clarifications
and Critical Remarks Part 3: Democratizing Biomedicine? The Role of Patient
Associations and Health Social Movements 11. Changing Contexts for Science
and Society Interaction: From Deficit to Dialogue, from Dialogue to
Participation- and beyond? 12. The Virtues (and Some Perils) of Activist
Participation: The Political and Epistemic Legitimacy of Patient Activism
13. The Ethical Legitimacy of Patient Organizations' Involvement in
Politics and Knowledge Production: Epistemic Justice as a Conceptual Basis
14. Conclusion: Effects of and Challenges to the Public Shaping of Medical
Research
Shaping of Biomedical Research: An Introduction Part 1: Empirical Cases and
Theoretical Perspectives 1. A Seat at the Table, "a Lab of Our Own" and
Working with What We Know Now: How the U.S. Environmental Breast Cancer
Movement Shapes Research 2. Initiating and Funding Medical Research on a
Rare Disease: The Approach of the German Cystic Fibrosis Association 3.
EURORDIS: Empowering Patients Living with Rare Diseases to Participate in
Biomedical Knowledge Production 4. The Entanglement of Scientific and
Political Claims: Towards a New Form of Patients' Activism 5. Obesity, the
Alternative Food Movement, and Complete Streets: New Forms of 'Patient'
Activism and the Evolution of Health Social Movements Part 2: Shifting
Contexts and New Challenges 6. Autism, the Internet and Medicalization 7. A
Community Fractured: Canada's Breast Cancer Movement, Pharmaceutical
Company Funding, and Science-Related Advocacy 8. Beyond Scientific
Controversies: Scientific Counterpublics, Countervailing Industries, and
Undone Science 9. Interpellating Patients as Future Users of Biomedical
Technologies: The Case of Patient Associations and Stem Cell Research 10.
Patient Organizations as Biosocial Communities? Conceptual Clarifications
and Critical Remarks Part 3: Democratizing Biomedicine? The Role of Patient
Associations and Health Social Movements 11. Changing Contexts for Science
and Society Interaction: From Deficit to Dialogue, from Dialogue to
Participation- and beyond? 12. The Virtues (and Some Perils) of Activist
Participation: The Political and Epistemic Legitimacy of Patient Activism
13. The Ethical Legitimacy of Patient Organizations' Involvement in
Politics and Knowledge Production: Epistemic Justice as a Conceptual Basis
14. Conclusion: Effects of and Challenges to the Public Shaping of Medical
Research