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Blameworthiness Implies ‘Ought not’
Here is a crucial principle for debates about moral luck, responsibility, and free will: a subject is blameworthy for an act only if, in acting, she...
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Review of the Knowledge, Barriers, and Facilitators of HPV Vaccination among Latino Migrant and Seasonal Farmworkers in the United States
One subgroup of Latinos whose healthcare needs must be more thoroughly addressed is the roughly three million farmworkers pursuing seasonal...
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Community-Engaged Data Science (CEDS): A Case Study of Working with Communities to Use Data to Inform Change
Data-informed decision making is a critical goal for many community-based public health research initiatives. However, community partners often...
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Environmental risk and market approval for human pharmaceuticals
This paper contributes to the growing discussion about how to mitigate pharmaceutical pollution, which is a threat to human, animal, and...
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Learning from disability studies to introduce the role of the individual to naturalistic accounts of disease
Disability studies have been successfully focusing on individuals' lived experiences, the personalization of goals, and the constitution of the...
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Generative Artificial Intelligence as Hypercommons: Ethics of Authorship and Ownership
In this editorial essay, we argue that Generative Artificial Intelligence programs (GenAI) draw on what we term a “hypercommons”, involving...
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SACCIA Communication, Attitudes Towards Cheating and Academic Misconduct
Academic misconduct by students is a serious issue that threatens the public trust in higher education institutions. In the current study, we examine...
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Resisting Financial Consumer Responsibilization Through Community Counter-Conduct
This paper investigates Street Fight Radio’s consumer community’s resistance to neoliberal financial consumer responsibilization. Extant scholarship...
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Experience of Marginalization in Noncooperative Spaces: The Case of Undocumented Migrant Workers in Italy
Undocumented migrant workers are among a group of marginalized stakeholders who are severely exploited at their workplace and across broader society....
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First Things First: Using Anchoring Bias to Examine the Effect of Penalty Severity and Social Norms on Tax Compliance
Although ethics research shows that prospective penalties for tax fraud can increase taxpayers’ compliance with tax laws, we do not have a clear...
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Scoring the Ethics of AI Robo-Advice: Why We Need Gateways and Ratings
Unlike the many services already transformed by artificial intelligence ( AI ), the financial advice sector remains committed to a human interface....
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Planning without Banning: Animal Research and the Argument from Avoidable Harms
The call for a planned phase-out is at the forefront of the political debate about animal experimentation. While authorities like the European...
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Does Social Media Pressure Induce Corporate Hypocrisy? Evidence of ESG Greenwashing from China
Hypocrisy in corporate social responsibility has attracted increasing attention from scholars. Under the context of the digital era, we examine...
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Locative grounding harmony
In this paper, we explore locative grounding harmony, according to which the location of the grounds mirrors the location of the grounded. We proceed...
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Is the State a Socially Responsible Shareholder? State-Owned Enterprises, Political Ideology, and Corporate Social Performance
The effects of state ownership on firms’ outcomes depend on how governments influence the goals of state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Yet scant...