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L’utilité de ce genre d’institutions est incontestable. Car le monde moderne est sans cesse confronté à des innovations, médicales ou autres, qui s’appliquent à l’homme ou à son environnement proche. Ce lieu est donc nécessaire pour préparer la matière intellectuelle qui sera ensuite transférée aux citoyens afin que ceux- ci puissent se prononcer quant à la légitimité de ces innovations.

 

Professeur Axel Kahn, le célèbre généticien français, lors de l’inauguration de la Fondation Brocher

 

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Le Cycle Brocher organise de nombreuses conférences au cours de l'année. La plupart des conférences sont disponibles en podcast

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Anne Hudson Jones Anne Hudson Jones

Professor & Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine - University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
United States

Bioéthique, éthique

Anne Hudson Jones, Ph.D. in comparative literature, is Professor and Harris L. Kempner Chair in the Humanities in Medicine, in the Institute for the Medical Humanities (IMH) and the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health of The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB) at Galveston, where she is also on the faculty of the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. She served for eight years as Director of the IMH Medical Humanities Graduate Program, which offers the only Ph.D. in medical humanities in the United States.
A founding editor of the journal Literature and Medicine (Johns Hopkins U Press), Jones served as its editor-in-chief for more than a decade. She has published widely in American and international humanities and biomedical journals, including a series of essays about literature and medicine for the Lancet. She has two books: Images of Nurses: Perspectives from History, Art, and Literature (U Pennsylvania Press, 1988; Japanese trans., 1997); and, with Faith McLellan, Ethical Issues in Biomedical Publication (Johns Hopkins U Press, 2000).
Her current research interests include the theory and practice of literature and medicine; narrative ethics; narratives of mental illness; Renaissance art, anatomy, and humanism; and ethical issues in narratives of medical catastrophes. She has received many awards for her research and teaching, most recently the University of Texas Board of Regents' Outstanding Teaching Award (2013).