Article info
Global medical ethics
Black markets, transplant kidneys and interpersonal coercion
- Correspondence to: J S Taylor Department of Philosophy, The College of New Jersey, 2000 Pennington Road, PO Box 7718, Ewing, NJ 08628-0718, USA;jtaylor{at}tcnj.edu
Citation
Black markets, transplant kidneys and interpersonal coercion
Publication history
- Received January 5, 2006
- Accepted February 9, 2006
- Revised February 4, 2006
- First published December 4, 2006.
Online issue publication
December 04, 2006
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
Copyright 2006 by the Journal of Medical Ethics
Other content recommended for you
- Choice, pressure and markets in kidneys
- Methods and principles in biomedical ethics
- A legal market in organs: the problem of exploitation
- The best argument against kidney sales fails
- The ethics of biomedical markets
- Would you sell a kidney in a regulated kidney market? Results of an exploratory study
- Imposing options on people in poverty: the harm of a live donor organ market
- A “Queen of Hearts” trial of organ markets: why Scheper-Hughes’s objections to markets in human organs fail
- If I were a rich man could I sell a pancreas? A study in the locus of oppression
- Prize, not price: reframing rewards for kidney donors