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This book offers a radical reassessment of the value of a child; one that does not rely on reference to her value to adults, or to her resemblance to adults, or even to her potential to become an adult in the future. Children are dependent on adults to speak for them. The main thesis of this book is that, when it comes to moral reasoning, that dependence can leave children vulnerable, because adults assume that the best way to exist is as an adult. Ethical theories accordingly typically privilege capacities that are normal for adults, but do not characterise the normal child. Or they might…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book offers a radical reassessment of the value of a child; one that does not rely on reference to her value to adults, or to her resemblance to adults, or even to her potential to become an adult in the future. Children are dependent on adults to speak for them. The main thesis of this book is that, when it comes to moral reasoning, that dependence can leave children vulnerable, because adults assume that the best way to exist is as an adult. Ethical theories accordingly typically privilege capacities that are normal for adults, but do not characterise the normal child. Or they might reference the value a child has to the adults around her, rather than explaining a child s value in her own terms. Bioethics is, on the whole, unapologetically adult-normative.

The author argues that such ethical theories do not serve children well. Drawing on neuroscience, philosophy and his own experience as a paediatrician specialising in the care of dying children, Dr. Hain sets out a way of explaining a child s value that references instead the real-world nature of the child. He then considers how current medical ethics might look without adult-normative distortion.

This book is aimed at ethicists and moral philosophers or theologians, as well as medical and law students with an interest in ethics in children. It will also interest doctors and nurses working with children in disciplines such as palliative care, intensive care, psychiatry, and those working alongside clinical teams in bioethics and chaplaincy.
Autorenporträt
Since 2000, Dr. Richard Hain has been clinical lead for paediatric palliative medicine in Wales, leading a country-wide network comprising a wide range of professionals caring for children dying from malignant and non-malignant life limiting conditions. He graduated in medicine from Guy's Hospital (now part of King's College London) in 1986 and in 1999 became triply certified in paediatrics, paediatric oncology and adult palliative medicine. In addition to my medical degree, I hold doctorates in opioid pharmacology from King's College London, and moral theology from the University of Oxford. In 2000 he was appointed in Wales as the UK’s first academic in paediatric palliative medicine. In 2009, he led a successful submission to the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health to offer specialist certification in Paediatric Palliative Medicine, and became the first chair of its Specialist Advisory Committee.  For some years he chaired the the Cardiff and Vale University Health Board Clinical Ethics Committee, and he now Chairs the Individual Patient Funding Review Panel.   His research interest is bioethics, especially as it relates to children at the end of life. he has authored around 150 research papers, reviews and book chapters. he has edited three editions of the award-winning Oxford Textbook of Palliative Care in Children and he is co-author of the Oxford Handbook of Paediatric Palliative Medicine. He is Honorary Professor in Clinical Ethics in the Faculty of Medicine at Swansea University and Visiting Professor at the Welsh Institute for Health and Social Care at University of South Wales. He remains active in postgraduate education and am involved in ethics to students in medicine, law, philosophy and theology. He has received a number of awards for my work in palliative care and ethics, including the Maruzza Foundation's Vittorio Ventafridda award in Palliative Medicine and Kidney Wales' Salaman/Morgan Ethics Travel Fellowship.