Research ethics

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The research ethics deals with the ethical principles of research and the tension between research interests and the observance of universal norms and values. The focus of interest is on questions of the responsibility and accountability of research and its possible effects on individuals and society.

Examples of socially relevant problem areas of research ethics are the areas of animal experiments or human experiments with test persons , stem cell research , genetic engineering , research for armaments purposes, the consumption of resources by research and data protection .

See also

literature

  • Urban Wiesing, Alfred Simon, Dietrich von Engelhardt: Ethics in medical research. Schattauer, Stuttgart 2000 ISBN 3-7945-2087-4
  • Martin W. Schnell, Charlotte Heinritz: Research ethics: A basic and work book with examples from health and nursing science. Huber, 1st edition, Bern 2006 ISBN 3-456-84288-0
  • Dominik Groß: Research on humans . In: Ralf Stoecker , Christian Neuhäuser , Marie-Luise Raters (eds.): Handbuch angewandte Ethik , Stuttgart / Weimar 2011, pp. 414–419 ISBN 978-3-476-02303-2
  • Dominik Groß: Ethical limits of human medical research . In: Volker Schumpelick, Bernhard Vogel (Ed.): Innovations in Medicine and Health Care , Freiburg 2011, pp. 437–457 ISBN 978-3-451-30383-8
  • Krause, Ulrike (2016), Ethical considerations on field research. Impulses for the Study of Conflict-Induced Displacement , CCS Working Paper Series, No. 20
  • Research methods and evaluation in the social and human sciences
  • Handbook Ethics Further information available at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-476-02713-9

Web links