The Ethical Governance of German Physicians, 1890–1939: Are There Lessons from History?
In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 29-52
ISSN: 1528-4190
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In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 29-52
ISSN: 1528-4190
In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 23, Heft 1
ISSN: 0898-0306
The limitations of the traditional historiography of the ethical regulation of biomedical research are becoming increasingly well recognized. A simplistic history has been used to justify a simplistic policy, in the elaboration of regulatory instruments associated with a bureaucracy of administration and enforcement that has acquired its own material interests in self-perpetuation and jurisdictional expansion. The official history of institutionalized ethical regulation sees a clear and self-evident line of descent from the Nazi experiments of World War II to the various legal and quasi-legal instruments that now govern most scientific and, increasingly, social scientific practice. Without regulatory interventions, it is claimed, researchers will revert to barbarism. Adapted from the source document.