Does A Public Health Crisis Justify More Research With Incarcerated People?

HASTINGS CENTER REPORT(2021)

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Abstract
Covid-19 has infected thousands and killed hundreds in prisons, jails, and immigration detention facilities across the United States. Responding to this crisis, leading medical researchers have called for expanding opportunities for people in prison to participate in vaccine trials. These calls, like current regulations, focus on individualized risk assessments around consent, coercion, and harm while ignoring the unnaturalness of deprivation conditions in U.S. prisons. We need new frameworks of analysis that refocus on structural, rather than individual, risk assessments. Integrating structural perspectives-including skepticism about claims that resources and research subjects are scarce, avoidance of representational distortions, and attention to institutional agency-into our existing overly individualistic frameworks might permit the design of more ethical research projects involving people who are incarcerated. Still, the unnatural deprivations of incarceration might be so great that people might need to be removed from prison entirely in order to ethically participate in research.
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Key words
Covid-19, prison, experimentation, vaccine trials, vulnerable populations
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