Transnational policy migration, interdisciplinary policy transfer and decolonization: Tracing the patterns of research ethics regulation in Taiwan.
Dev World Bioeth
; 20(1): 5-15, 2020 03.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-30993868
ABSTRACT
Research ethics regulation in parts of the Global North has sometimes been initiated in the face of biomedical scandal. More recently, developing and recently developed countries have had additional reasons to regulate, doing so to attract international clinical trials and American research funding, publish in international journals, or to respond to broader social changes. In Taiwan, biomedical research ethics policy based on 'principlism' and committee-based review were imported from the United States. Professionalisation of research ethics displaced other longer-standing ways of conceiving ethics connected with Taiwanese cultural traditions. Subsequently, the model and its discursive practices were extended to other disciplines. Regulation was also shaped by decolonizing discourses associated with asserting Indigenous peoples' rights. Locating research ethics regulation within the language and practices of public policy formation and transfer as well as decolonization, allows analysis to move beyond the self-referential and attend to the social, economic and political context within which regulation operates.
Texto completo:
1
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Política Pública
/
Comitês de Ética em Pesquisa
/
Pesquisa Biomédica
/
Regulamentação Governamental
/
Ética em Pesquisa
/
Sujeitos da Pesquisa
Tipo de estudo:
Prognostic_studies
Limite:
Humans
País/Região como assunto:
Asia
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Dev World Bioeth
Assunto da revista:
ETICA
Ano de publicação:
2020
Tipo de documento:
Article