Although the subject of federally mandated Institutional Review
Boards (IRBs) has been extensively debated, we actually do not know
much about what takes place when they convene. The story of how
IRBs work today is a story about their past as well as their
present, and "Behind Closed Doors "is the first book to meld
firsthand observations of IRB meetings with the history of how
rules for the treatment of human subjects were formalized in the
United States in the decades after World War II. Drawing on
extensive archival sources, Laura Stark reconstructs the daily
lives of scientists, lawyers, administrators, and research subjects
working--and "warring"--on the campus of the National Institutes of
Health, where they first wrote the rules for the treatment of human
subjects. Stark argues that the model of group deliberation that
gradually crystallized during this period reflected contemporary
legal and medical conceptions of what it meant to be human, what
political rights human subjects deserved, and which stakeholders
were best suited to decide. She then explains how the historical
contingencies that shaped rules for the treatment of human subjects
in the postwar era guide decision making today--within hospitals,
universities, health departments, and other institutions in the
United States and across the globe. Meticulously researched and
gracefully argued, "Behind Closed Doors" will be essential reading
for sociologists and historians of science and medicine, as well as
policy makers and IRB administrators.
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