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  • Contributors

Lisa Campo-Engelstein is an assistant professor at the Alden March Bioethics Institute, Albany Medical College, and coeditor of a book on the emerging field of oncofertility. Her current research areas are contraception, oncofertility, fertility preservation technologies, embryo and parthenote research, and international bioethics.

I. Glenn Cohen is assistant professor at Harvard Law School and codirector of the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard University.

Rebecca Dresser is Daniel Noyes Kirby Professor of Law and professor of ethics in medicine at Washington University in St. Louis.

Troy Duster is Silver Professor of Sociology at New York University and also holds an appointment as Chancellor’s Professor at the University of California, Berkeley. From 1996–98, he served as member and then chair of the joint National Institutes of Health/Department of Education Advisory Committee on Ethical, Legal and Social Issues in the Human Genome Project. He is the author of Backdoor to Eugenics (2nd ed., Routledge, 2003).

Lawrence O. Gostin is the University Professor at Georgetown University and professor of global health law at Georgetown Law, where he directs the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law. He is also professor of medicine at Georgetown and professor of public health at Johns Hopkins University. His latest books from the University of California Press are Public Health Law and Ethics: A Reader (2010) and Public Health Law: Power, Duty, Restraint (2008).

Daniel Groll is an assistant professor of philosophy of Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, and a former participant in case conferences at the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago Hospitals. His work focuses on questions about moral knowledge, moral expertise, autonomy, and paternalism.

Nell Burger Kirst is a third-year resident at the University of Michigan Family Medicine Residency Program.

Osagie K. Obasogie is an associate professor of law at the University of California, Hastings, in San Francisco with a joint appointment at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences. He is also a senior fellow at the Center for Genetics and Society in Berkeley, California (www.geneticsandsociety.org).

Aron D. Rose is an ophthalmologist in private practice in New Haven, Connecticut. He is also an associate clinical professor at the Yale School of Medicine and the Yale School of Nursing and foundation codirector of Eye Team Worldwide.

Katie Watson is assistant professor in the Medical Humanities and Bioethics Program, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University; adjunct faculty (improvisation and writing) at The Second City Training Center; and editor of Atrium. She teaches law, ethics, and improvisation as a tool for physician-patient communication to Northwestern medical students, and she is a member of the Northwestern Memorial Hospital Ethics Committee. [End Page 48]

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