Beyond Tuskegee: Race and Human Subjects Research in US History
AAS 331/HIS 382
1232
1232
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This course will explore the history of human subjects research as a scientific practice and how practitioners interpreted the use of living and dead bodies for producing scientific knowledge. It examines how and why certain bodies become eligible for research and experimentation. This course will show how race, class, gender, and disability shape the history of human subjects research, and show how human subjects were also deliberately selected from vulnerable populations. It will focus on the experiences of African Americans as research subjects, and consider other vulnerable populations such as children, the disabled, and the incarcerated.
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Section M01
- Type: Unknown
- Section: M01
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 14
- Capacity: 17
- Class Number: 21435
- Schedule: W 08:30 AM-09:50 AM - Morrison Hall 201
Section S01
- Type: Seminar
- Section: S01
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 14
- Capacity: 15
- Class Number: 21436
- Schedule: M 08:30 AM-09:50 AM - Morrison Hall 201