Heather Widdows’s research while affiliated with University of Birmingham and other places

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Publications (40)


II—No Duty to Resist: Why Individual Resistance Is an Ineffective Response to Dominant Beauty Ideals
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2022

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32 Reads

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8 Citations

Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society (Hardback)

Heather Widdows

In this paper I argue that the way to reduce the power of overdemanding beauty ideals is not to advocate that individuals have a ‘duty to resist’, a duty to stop engaging in appearance enhancing practices and body work. I begin by arguing against the claim that women who ‘do’ beauty are suffering from false consciousness. I then give four further additional arguments against advocating a ‘duty to resist’ as an effective means to challenge dominant beauty norms. First, that as a tactic it is ineffective. Second, it is an individual approach which divides and silences. Third, it induces shame and blame, and undermines effective collective action. Fourth, it fails to recognize the privilege of the group norms which make resistance possible.

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Altered Images: Understanding the Influence of Unrealistic Images and Beauty Aspirations

September 2018

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2,701 Reads

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64 Citations

Health Care Analysis

In this paper we consider the impact of digitally altered images on individuals' body satisfaction and beauty aspirations. Drawing on current psychological literature we consider interventions designed to increase knowledge about the ubiquity and unreality of digital images and, in the form of labelling, provide information to the consumer. Such interventions are intended to address the negative consequences of unrealistic beauty ideals. However, contrary to expectations, such initiatives may not be effective, especially in the long-term, and may even be counter-productive. We seek to understand this phenomenon of our continued aspiration for beauty ideals we know to be unreal and even impossible. We draw on our respective disciplines to offer psychological and philosophical accounts for why this might be. We conclude that beauty ideals are deeply embedded in our aspirations, practices, and in our constructions of ourselves. Given this, it is not surprising that simply increasing knowledge, or providing information, will be insufficient to challenge them.


The Demands of Beauty: Editors’ Introduction

July 2018

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477 Reads

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17 Citations

Health Care Analysis

This article introduces a Special Issue comprising four papers emerging from the Beauty Demands Network project, and maps key issues in the beauty debate. The introduction first discusses the purpose of the Network; to consider the changing demands of beauty across disciplines and beyond academia. It then summarises the findings of the Network workshops, emphasising the complex place of notions of normality, and the different meanings and functions attached to ‘normal’ in the beauty context. Concerns are raised here about the use of normal to justify and motivate engaging in beauty practices such as cosmetic surgery and ‘non-invasive’ procedures. Other workshop findings included the recognition of beauty as increasingly a global value rather than a culturally distinct ideal, and the understanding that there is no clear distinction between beauty practices that are considered standard and those that are considered extreme. These themes, especially the concerns around understanding of normal, are reflected in the recommendations made by the Network in its Briefing Paper, which are presented next in this introduction. A further theme picked up by these recommendations is the extent to which individuals who are not traditionally vulnerable may be so in the beauty context. Finally, the introduction highlights the key matters covered in the four papers of the Special Issue: regulatory concerns around cosmetic surgery tourism; the impact of digitally altered images from psychological and philosophical perspectives; the ethics of genetic selection for fair skin; and the attraction and beauty of the contemporary athletic body.


Human embryos and eggs: from long-term storage to biobanking

December 2015

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45 Reads

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6 Citations

Monash Bioethics Review

Genetic relatedness poses significant challenges to traditional practices of medical ethics as concerns the biobanking of human biological samples. In this paper, we first outline the ethical challenges to informed consent and confidentiality as these apply to human biobanks, irrespective of the type of tissue being stored. We argue that the shared nature of genetic information has clear implications for informed consent, and the identifying nature of biological samples and information has clear implications for promises of confidentiality. Next, with regard to the special case of biobanking human embryos and eggs, we consider issues arising from: first, the type of tissues being stored; second, the use to which these tissues are put; and third, how this plays out given the shared and identifying nature of these tissues. Specifically, we examine the differences between human bodily tissues and human reproductive tissues focusing on the assumed potential of the reproductive tissues and on the possible greater emotional attachment to these tissues because of their real and imagined kinship. For some donors there may be a sense of family connection with embryos and eggs they once thought of as 'children-in-waiting'. Finally, we conclude by considering the implications for ethical practice.


Global Health Justice and the Right to Health

July 2015

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64 Reads

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7 Citations

Health Care Analysis

This paper reflects on Lawrence Gostin's Global Health Law. In so doing seeks to contribute to the debate about how global health justice is best conceived and achieved. Gostin's vision of global health is one which is communal and in which health is directly connected to other justice concerns. Hence the need for health-in-all policies, and the importance of focusing on basic and communal health goods rather than high-tech and individual ones. This paper asks whether this broadly communal vision of global health justice is best served by making the right to health central to the project. It explores a number of reasons why rights-talk might be problematic in the context of health justice; namely, structurally, rights are individual and state-centric and politically, they are oppositional and better suited to single-issue campaigns. The paper argues that stripping rights of their individualist assumptions is difficult, and perhaps impossible, and hence alternative approaches, such as those Gostin endorses based on global public goods and health security, might deliver much, perhaps most, global health goods, while avoiding the problems of rights-talk.


A Global Public Goods Approach to the Health of Migrants

July 2015

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38 Reads

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19 Citations

Public Health Ethics

This paper explores a global public goods approach to the health of migrants. It suggests that this approach establishes that there are a number of health goods which must be provided to migrants not because these are theirs by right (although this may independently be the case), but because these goods are primary goods which fit the threefold criteria of global public goods. There are two key advantages to this approach: first, it is non-confrontational and non-oppositional, and second, it provides self-interested arguments to provide at least some health goods to migrants and thus appeals to those little moved by rights-based arguments.


Philosophical Feminist Bioethics

April 2015

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41 Reads

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13 Citations

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics

The end of the last century was a particularly vibrant period for feminist bioethics. Almost two decades on, we reflect on the legacy of the feminist critique of bioethics and investigate the extent to which it has been successful and what requires more attention yet. We do this by examining the past, present, and future: we draw out three feminist concerns that emerged in this period-abstraction, individualism, and power-and consider three feminist responses-relationality, particularity, and justice-and we finish with some thoughts about the future.


Global ethics: A short reflection on then and now

September 2014

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63 Reads

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5 Citations

Journal of Global Ethics

Ten years on from the first issue of the Journal of Global Ethics, Darrel Moellendorf and Heather Widdows reflect on the current state of research in global ethics. To do this, they summarise a recent comprehensive road map of the field and provide a map of research by delineating the topics and approaches of leading scholars of global ethics collected together in the recently published Routledge Handbook of Global Ethics which they have co-edited. Topics fall under issues of war, conflict and violence; poverty and development; economic justice; bioethics and health justice; and environmental and climate justice. In all these areas, ethicists are becoming ever more engaged in the details and mechanisms of actually delivering justice in the real world.


Handbook of Global Bioethics

January 2014

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16 Reads

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5 Citations

Commodification is a broad and crosscutting issue that spans debates in ethics (from prostitution to global market practices) and bioethics (from the sale of body parts to genetic enhancement). There has been disagreement, however, over what constitutes commodification, whether it is happening, and whether it is of ethical import. This chapter focuses on one area of the discussion in bioethics – the commodification of human tissue – and addresses these questions – about the characteristics of commodification, its pervasiveness, and ethical significance – in order to clarify and map the commodificatory debate. The chapter does this in three parts. First, it defines commodification as the shift from “persons” to “things” and from “relationships” to services for “contract.” Second, using examples of kidney and gamete sale and commercial surrogacy, it argues that commodification is rife in bioethics. Third, it contends that commodification is an ethical problem for three key reasons: First, because it leads to exploitation; second, because some things should not be for sale; and third, because it damages social goods. The chapter concludes that commodification and commodificatory practices should be resisted.


Citations (31)


... Nevertheless, even language that is not obviously racialized may affect stereotypes and norms about Black Americans, in a way that is not best described as a "harm" let alone one that is separately identifiable and affects specific individuals. Similarly, the use of beauty standards in advertising might not be harmful at all, let alone be harmful to a specific woman, but it may promote distorted beliefs about women as a whole and be a form of structural injustice (Widdows, 2021). Moreover, remember how structural injustice accumulates and compounds. ...

Reference:

Artificial Intelligence and Structural Injustice: Foundations for Equity, Values, and Responsibility
Structural injustice and the Requirements of Beauty

Journal of Social Philosophy

... So what does the case of trafficking teach about the importance of and strategic emphasis on women's rights? First of all, the many strands of discrimination against women present in the situation of trafficking show that focusing on single issues like trafficking or political participation or health and reproductive rights or social entitlements, as we have done in the NEWR project (see Hellsten et al. 2005;Widdows et al. 2005;Guichon et al. 2006;van den Anker & Doomernik 2006), to some extent diverts the attention from the overall theme of women's rights. Kerr confirms this when she states that these core issues dominate much of our theory and analysis. ...

Women’s Reproductive Rights
  • Citing Article
  • January 2006

... Pemahaman terhadap diri inilah, yang kerap menimbulkan ketidakamanan, mengundang pikiran curiga, disebut sebagai insekuritas, karena realita tubuh, aktual, transformasi dan imajinasi, pemikiran kita sendiri terhadap penilaian orang lain, yang belum tentu pemikiran tersebut memiliki benang merah yang sama, dengan apa yang ada dalam pikiran diri sendiri (Weiser, 2019;Widdows & MacCallum, 2018). ...

The Demands of Beauty: Editors’ Introduction

Health Care Analysis

... A imagem corporal é um constructo complexo e multifacetado que inclui comportamentos, pensamentos e sentimentos relacionados à experiência subjetiva sobre o corpo (Edlund et al., 2022;MacCallum & Widdows, 2018), dividida em dimensões, perceptiva e atitudinal, compondo um conjunto de desejos, sentimentos, pensamentos e interação social do indivíduo sobre seu próprio corpo (Carvalho, Conti, Cordás, & Ferreira, 2012;Ferreira, Castro, & Morgado, 2014;Gonçalves, Campana, & Tavares, 2012;Thompson, 2004). No decorrer da progressão do número de problemas relacionados à imagem corporal e suas vertentes, as pesquisas passaram a focar em avaliar e buscar aspectos que estejam relacionados à imagem corporal negativa (Thompson & Gardner, 2002). ...

Altered Images: Understanding the Influence of Unrealistic Images and Beauty Aspirations

Health Care Analysis

... Not surprisingly, political and community leaders have expressed a growing concern regarding "the need to establish appropriate means of mediating between ethical convictions that clash but are sincerely held" (Hutchings, 2010, p. 197). Widdows (2011) declares that "Globalization, and the political, technological and social changes and advances that accompany it, raise new dilemmas, and global ethics is a response to these" (p. 4; cf. ...

Global Ethics: An Introduction
  • Citing Article
  • January 2010

... Recipients also saw ED as 'adoption with benefits', including advantages referenced in other research such as a greater likelihood of being selected, the opportunity to experience pregnancy, childbirth, and parenting from birth, as well as the ability to appear more like 'other' families (Johnson, 2003;Blyth et al., 2011;Hill and Freeman, 2011;Keenan et al., 2012). While the adoption metaphor allowed recipients to draw parallels between their position and that of adoptive parents, they also placed great emphasis on the role of gestation, seeing it as significant for attachment (as was the case in MacCallum, 2009 andas reported by MacCallum andWiddows, 2012), as well as offering control over the child's prenatal development, and even affecting genetic make-up. Through emphasizing gestation, recipients were thus able to achieve some distance from the genetic parents and assert their position as parents. ...

Ethical issues in embryo donation

... It has been suggested that donors should make their preferences explicit during the donation process (Deech, 1998;Burrell, 2012;Dillon and Fiester, 2012;Kool et al., 2018). Others prefer donors to provide consent as an ongoing process as they may change their preferences over time (Baylis and Widdows, 2015;Stroud and O'Doherty, 2015;Kool et al., 2018). It should be clarified that in some contexts it may not be possible to recontact the donor, while in others there is a legal obligation to check before use of the donation. ...

Human embryos and eggs: from long-term storage to biobanking
  • Citing Article
  • December 2015

Monash Bioethics Review

... In England, a country with an individualistic tradition, yet also a solidaristic healthcare system, public institutions and documents suggest there is a need for a 'new social contract for genomic medicine', and greater focus on the collective dimensions of genomics i.e. the importance of community participation, public interest and trust [43,45,46]. For example, GE has called upon the public's civic duty to participate in the 100 kGP as a contribution to the common good and an expression of solidarity [47]. ...

The Governance of Genetic Information: Who Decides?
  • Citing Article
  • January 2009

... There is a need to look further than individual control, individual privacy, and individual informed consent within genomics and genetics, because genetic information is often shared with other people. Many authors have called for approaches to genetics that move beyond the focus on the individual (Knoppers and Beauvais 2021;Parker and Lucassen 2004;Prainsack and Buyx 2013;Widdows 2013). However, these debates predominantly focus on the clinical or research setting. ...

The Connected Self: The Ethics and Governance of the Genetic Individual
  • Citing Article
  • January 2010