– Increase word count to 2000 words.
– Add references from some of these articl
– Increase word count to 2000 words.
– Add references from some of these articles:
Almeling, R (2011). Sex Cells: The Medical Market for Eggs and Sperm. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Fontaine, P. (2002). ‘Blood, Politics and Social Science’, Isis 93:401-434.
Hoeyer, K. (2007). Person, Patent and Property: A Critique of the Commodification Hypothesis. BioSocieties, 2:327-348.
Alexander, S.J. (2015). “I Sold My Eggs For the Money” Lenny. Available at: https://www.lennyletter.com/story/i-sold-my-eggs-for-the-money
Waldby, C. and R. Mitchell (2006). Tissue Economies: Blood, Organs and Cell Lines in Late Capitalism. Durham: Duke University Press.
Scheper-Hughes, N. (2007) “The last commodity: Post-human ethics and the global traffic in “fresh” organs,” in Global Assemblages: Technology, politics and ethics as anthropological problems, Blackwell, 2007, pp. 145-167
– Ensure that the essay meets these guidelines:
The essay should, among others: (1) outline the key elements
of the concept or approach it focuses on; (2) discuss who developed this concept or approach,
why they did so as well as the wider context in which they did this; (3) show, using empirical
evidence, what insights this concept or approach offers when looking at developments in
biomedicine and global health; and (4) explore, using empirical evidence, possible limitations
and shortcomings of this concept or approach, compared to other concepts or approaches,
when trying to make sense of contemporary developments in biomedicine and global health.
The essay should draw on empirical evidence from the literature or your own research.