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NIH Mar 20, 2000 | R25
A Case-Based Ethics Curriculum for the Biotech Industry
Institution: Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics
FOA Number: PA-96-042
Abstract
The general aim of the project is to research and develop instructional material on business ethics decision making for those involved in commercializing biotechnology and genomics products. There are four specific aims. They are (1) to research and identify the ethical and social issues that are raised when biotechnology and genomic research is commercialized, (2) to develop an analytical business ethics decision making model or process that can be used by pharmaceutical and biotechnology corporations when their managers face these ethical and social issues, (3) to develop comprehensive ease studies in business ethics based on past pharmaceutical and biotechnology corporate behavior, and (4) to apply the decision making process to these case studies as examples of how corporate managers can/incorporate ethical reflection, debate, and analysis into business practices. The results of this research project will be directed primarily to pharmaceutical and biotechnology corporate executives, managers, board members and attorneys. The detailed case studies developed through collaboration between the Center for Biomedical Ethics and the Graduate School of Business will be utilized within Stanford University's Executive Education Program. The case studies developed will also be available to augment business ethics curricula at Stanford University and of other graduate schools of business. Case material will be distributed via the World Wide Web and eventually through a conventional text book format.
FUNDING AGENCY:
Funder:
NIHInstitute:
NATIONAL HUMAN GENOME RESEARCH INSTITUTEFunding Type:
R25Project Number:
R25HG002082Start Date:
Mar 20, 2000End Date:
Feb 28, 2001PROJECT TERMS:
behavioral /social science research tag, biotechnology, case history, consumer product, curriculum, Decision Making, educational resource design /development, Ethics, genetic techniques, Genome, health science research, Pharmacology, social conformity, social cooperation, socioeconomics, sociology /anthropolog