Interrogations, Forced Feedings, and the Role of Health Professionals
New Perspectives on International Human Rights, Humanitarian Law, and Ethics
Ryan Goodman
Mindy Jane Roseman
Preface by Robert Jay Lifton
Introduction by Ryan Goodman and Mindy Jane Roseman
Part I. New Perspectives: The Constraints of Contexts
1. Places that Medical Ethics Can't Find: Preliminary Observations on Why Health Professionals Fail to Stop Torture in Overseas Counterterrorism Operations by Stephanie Erin Brewer and Jean Maria Arrigo
2. Looking Back, Thinking Ahead: The Complicity of Health Professionals in Detainee Abuse by Jonathan H. Marks
3. Compicty and the Illusion of Beneficence by Leonard S. Rubenstein
Part II. New Perspectives: Ethical Quandaries and Policy Positions
4. Further Consideration Regarding Interrogations and Forced Feedings by Edmund Howe
5. Closing Eyes to Atrocities: U.S. Psychologists, Detainee Interrogations, and the Response of the American Psychological Association by Stephen Soldz
6. Responding to Food Refusal: Striking the Human Rights Balance by James Welsh
7. Health Professionals and Dual Loyalty: A World Medical Association and Israeli Medical Association Perspective by Yoram Blachar and Malke Borow
Part III. New Perspectives: Operational Guidance on Interrogations and Hunger Strikes
8. Clinical and Operational Issues in the Medical Management of Hunger Strikers by Scott Allen and Hernan Reyes
Interrogation and Human Rights: Irreconcilable or Interdependent? by Steven Kleinman
Acknowledgements and Contributor Biographies


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