Stuff I've been reading (October 2025)

By Os Keyes

This fucking year.

Books and dissertations

  • None

Papers and Chapters

  • Arras, John D. “Principles and Particularity: The Role of Cases in Bioethics.” Indiana Law Journal 69.4 (1994): 5.
  • Caplan, Arthur L. “Kidneys, ethics, and politics: policy lessons of the ESRD experience.” Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 6.3 (1981): 488-503.
  • Caraballo, Alejandra. “The anti-transgender medical expert industry.” Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 50.4 (2022): 687-692.
  • Cohen, I. Glenn. “Rationing legal services.” Journal of Legal Analysis 5.1 (2013): 221-307.
  • Cohen, I. Glenn. “On the Human Right to Health: Statistical Lives, Contingent Persons, and Other Difficult Questions.” Human Rights, Democracy, and Legitimacy in a World of Disorder (Silja Voeneky & Gerald Neuman eds., Cambridge University Press, 2018).
  • Cohen, Ivan Glenn. “Organ donor intervention trials and risk to bystanders: An ethical analysis.” Clinical Trials 16.5 (2019): 463-465.
  • Corredor, Elizabeth S. “Unpacking “gender ideology” and the global right’s antigender countermovement.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 44.3 (2019): 613-638.
  • Fleck, Leonard M. “Just Caring: Health Care Rationing, Terminal Illness, and the Medically Least Well off.” Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39.2 (2011).
  • James, F. P. “The experimental treatment exclusion clause. A tool for silent rationing of health care?.” The Journal of Legal Medicine 12.3 (1991): 359-418.
  • Jones, David S. “CABG at 50 (or 107?)-the complex course of therapeutic innovation.” The New England journal of medicine 376.19 (2017): 1809.
  • Kallenborn, Zachary, and Henry H. Willis. “Globally Critical Infrastructure: The Unique Risks and Challenges.” Risk Analysis (2025).
  • Persad, Govind, Alan Wertheimer, and Ezekiel J. Emanuel. “Principles for allocation of scarce medical interventions.” The lancet 373.9661 (2009): 423-431.
  • Reynolds, Joel Michael. ““What if There’s Something Wrong with Her?”‐How Biomedical Technologies Contribute to Epistemic Injustice in Healthcare.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 58.1 (2020): 161-185.
  • Rogers, Wendy A., Katrina Hutchison, and Angus McNair. “Ethical issues across the IDEAL stages of surgical innovation.” Annals of Surgery 269.2 (2019): 229-233.

Fiction

  • None