Journal: Science and Engineering Ethics

Volume 13, Issue 4

383 -- 386Raymond E. Spier. Research Integrity
387 -- 394Melissa S. Anderson. Collective Openness and Other Recommendations for the Promotion of Research Integrity
395 -- 414Mark S. Davis, Michelle Riske-Morris, Sebastian R. Diaz. Causal Factors Implicated in Research Misconduct: Evidence from ORI Case Files
415 -- 435Elizabeth A. Boyd, Lisa A. Bero. Defining Financial Conflicts and Managing Research Relationships: An Analysis of University Conflict of Interest Committee Decisions
437 -- 461Melissa S. Anderson, Emily A. Ronning, Raymond de Vries, Brian C. Martinson. The Perverse Effects of Competition on Scientists' Work and Relationships
463 -- 487Gary Lee Downey, Juan C. Lucena, Carl Mitcham. Engineering Ethics and Identity: Emerging Initiatives in Comparative Perspective
489 -- 504Colleen Murphy, Paolo Gardoni. Determining Public Policy and Resource Allocation Priorities for Mitigating Natural Hazards: A Capabilities-based Approach
505 -- 522Gonzalo Génova, M. Rosario González, Anabel Fraga. Ethical Education in Software Engineering: Responsibility in the Production of Complex Systems
523 -- 580Seumas Miller, Michael J. Selgelid. Ethical and Philosophical Consideration of the Dual-use Dilemma in the Biological Sciences
581 -- 0Jinnie M. Garrett, Stephanie J. Bird. Ethical Issues in Communicating Science

Volume 13, Issue 3

279 -- 280Michelle H. Biros. The Ethics of Research in Emergency Medicine
281 -- 288Eugenijus Gefenas. Balancing Ethical Principles in Emergency Medicine Research
289 -- 295Kenneth V. Iserson. Has Emergency Medicine Research Benefited Patients? An Ethical Question
297 -- 303John McManus, Annette McClinton, Robert Gerhardt, Michael Morris. Performance of Ethical Military Research is Possible: On and Off the Battlefield
305 -- 313Ritva Halila. Assessing the Ethics of Medical Research in Emergency Settings: How Do International Regulations Work in Practice?
315 -- 332Agata Wnukiewicz-Kozlowska. The Admissibility of Research in Emergency Medicine
333 -- 336Piotr S. Iwanowski. Informed Consent Procedure for Clinical Trials in Emergency Settings: The Polish Perspective
337 -- 350Joanna Rózynska, Marek Czarkowski. Emergency Research without Consent under Polish Law
351 -- 359Malcolm G. Booth. Informed Consent in Emergency Research: A Contradiction in Terms
361 -- 369Michelle H. Biros. Research without Consent: Exception from and Waiver of Informed Consent in Resuscitation Research
371 -- 381Erwin J. O. Kompanje. 'No Time to be Lost!' - Ethical Considerations on Consent for Inclusion in Emergency Pharmacological Research in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury in the European Union

Volume 13, Issue 2

135 -- 137George R. Hoffmann. Letter to the editor on ethics of expertise, informed consent, and hormesis
139 -- 145Edward J. Calabrese. Elliott's Ethics of Expertise Proposal and Application: A Dangerous Precedent
147 -- 157Jessica S. Ancker, Annette Flanagin. A comparison of conflict of interest policies at peer-reviewed journals in different scientific disciplines
159 -- 169Jeffrey Kovac. Moral Rules, Moral Ideals, and Use-Inspired Research
171 -- 189Michael Davis. Eighteen rules for writing a code of professional ethics
191 -- 193Livia Puljak. Croatia founded a national body for ethics in science
195 -- 220Timothy N. Atkinson, Diane S. Gilleland. Virtue blindness and hegemony: qualitative evidence of negotiated ethical frameworks in the social language of university research administration
221 -- 233Barbro Björkman. Different types - Different rights - Distinguishing between different perspectives on ownership of biological material
235 -- 248Mark Coeckelbergh, Ger Wackers. Imagination, distributed responsibility and vulnerable technological systems: the case of Snorre A
249 -- 264Sean T. Powell, Matthew A. Allison, Michael W. Kalichman. Effectiveness of a responsible conduct of research course: a preliminary study
265 -- 273James A. Stieb. On "Bettering Humanity" in Science and Engineering Education
275 -- 277Katinka Waelbers. Peter-Paul Verbeek, What Things Do: Philosophical Reflections on Technology, Agency and Design - The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Pennsylvania, 2005, Paperback, £16.95, $25.00, ISBN-10: 0271025409, ISBN-13: 978-0271025407, Hardback, £50.95, ISBN-10: 0271025395, ISBN-13: 978-0271025391

Volume 13, Issue 1

1 -- 3Raymond E. Spier, Stephanie J. Bird. Science and Engineering Ethics at Springer
5 -- 24Anne Victoria Neale, Justin Northrup, Rhonda K. Dailey, Ellen Marks, Judith Abrams. Correction and use of biomedical literature affected by scientific misconduct
25 -- 43Nancy L. Jones. A code of ethics for the life sciences
45 -- 54Jeremy Wickins. The ethics of biometrics: the risk of social exclusion from the widespread use of electronic identification
55 -- 67Jantina de Vries. The obesity epidemic: medical and ethical considerations
69 -- 82Lucy Carter. A case for a duty to feed the hungry: GM plants and the third world
83 -- 98Alan Marshall. Questioning nuclear waste substitution: a case study
99 -- 115Sara Svensson, Sven Ove Hansson. Protecting people in research: a comparison between biomedical and traffic research
117 -- 127Marshall Thomsen. A course treating ethical issues in physics
129 -- 132Adam Briggle. ISBN 0-7425-4921-6)21.95