The medical profession is observing a rising number of calls to action considering the threat that climate change poses to global human health. Theory-led bioethical analyses of the scope and weight ...of physicians' normative duty towards climate protection and its conflict with individual patient care are currently scarce. This article offers an analysis of the normative issues at stake by using Korsgaard's neo-Kantian moral account of practical identities. We begin by showing the case of physicians' duty to climate protection, before we succinctly introduce Korsgaard's account. We subsequently show how the duty to climate protection can follow from physicians' identity of being a healthcare professional. We structure conflicts between individual patient care and climate protection, and show how a transformation in physicians' professional ethos is possible and what mechanisms could be used for doing so. An important limit of our analysis is that we mainly address the level of individual physicians and their practical identities, leaving out important measures to respond to climate change at the mesolevels and macrolevels of healthcare institutions and systems, respectively.
This paper proposes a framework for understanding and analysing online social resistance movements based on Hilde Lindemann’s concept of counterstories (Damaged Identities, Narrative Repair, 2003). ...This framework is based on the premise that we shape our identities in shared social spaces, and that such shared spaces are structured according to so-called ‘master narratives’. Master narratives define the ‘realm of possible identities’ that we can assume, and form the basis for either recognizing or denying recognition to various social groups in specific roles that they might occupy. Social oppression occurs when master narratives preclude or forbid a certain form of self-expression, or alternatively force members of a specific social group into a determinate societal role (say, women who receive recognition only in the roles of mother or housewife). Counterstories serve as a corrective to these aspects of oppression by challenging the oppressive facets of master narratives. Based on this framework, I propose an interpretation of the #MeToo movement as a counterstory that aims to change the oppressive aspects of the patriarchal master narrative that (partially) structures many shared social spaces in the modern Western world. I end this paper by applying the framework to consider potential obstacles #MeToo may encounter as a distinctively online movement.
This paper proposes a framework for understanding and analysing online social resistance movements based on Hilde Lindemann's concept of counterstories (Damaged Identities, Narrative Repair,_2003). ...This framework is based on the premise that we shape our identities in shared social spaces, and that such shared spaces are structured according to so-called 'master narratives'. Master narratives define the 'realm of possible identities' that we can assume, and form the basis for either recognizing or denying recognition to various social groups in specific roles that they might occupy. Social oppression occurs when master narratives preclude or forbid a certain form of self-expression, or alternatively force members of a specific social group into a determinate societal role (say, women who receive recognition only in the roles of mother or housewife). Counterstories serve as a corrective to these aspects of oppression by challenging the oppressive facets of master narratives. Based on this framework, I propose an interpretation of the #MeToo movement as a counterstory that aims to change the oppressive aspects of the patriarchal master narrative that (partially) structures many shared social spaces in the modern Western world. I end this paper by applying the framework to consider potential obstacles #MeToo may encounter as a distinctively online movement. keywords social resistance, counterstory, master narrative, Twitter, #MeToo
Editorial ‘the Value of Disorientation’ van Gils-Schmidt, Henk Jasper; Verdonschot, Clinton Peter; Schaubroeck, Katrien
Ethical theory and moral practice,
08/2020, Letnik:
23, Številka:
3-4
Journal Article