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  • Contributors

Jay Baruch is assistant professor of emergency medicine at the Warren Alpert School of Medicine at Brown University. He is the author of Fourteen Stories: Doctors, Patients and Other Strangers (Kent State, 2007), a collection of short fiction.

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.

Alice Dreger is professor of clinical medical humanities and bioethics at Northwestern University and presidential fellow at Cornell College. She is also a Guggenheim fellow.

Theodore Friedmann is professor of pediatrics and Muriel Whitehill Chair of Biomedical Ethics at the School of Medicine of the University of California, San Diego. He is past president of the American Society of Gene Therapy and past chairman of the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee of the Office of Biotechnology Activities of the National Institutes of Health. He edits Advances in Genetics and chairs the genetics panel at the World Anti-Doping Agency.

Susan Gilbert is staff writer at The Hastings Center.

Lawrence O. Gostin is the Linda D. and Timothy J. O’Neill Professor of Global Health Law and Faculty Director of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University Law Center. His latest book is Public Health Law: Power, Duty, Restraint (University of California Press, 2nd ed., 2009).

Aaron D. Levine is an assistant professor in the School of Public Policy at Georgia Tech, where his research explores the intersection between bioethics and public policy. He is the author of Cloning: A Beginner’s Guide (Oneworld Publications, 2007).

Thomas H. Murray is president of The Hastings Center. His most recent book is Performance-Enhancing Technologies in Sports: Ethical, Conceptual, and Legal Issues (Johns Hopkins, 2009), for which he wrote two chapters and also served as editor.

Bernard G. Prusak is a Gallen fellow in the humanities at Villanova, where he teaches ethics and great books. His research is focused on parental obligations, the intersections of philosophical anthropology and bioethics, and moral epistemology. He is writing a book with the working title Parenting and the Obligations of Justice and Virtue toward Children.

Jan Todd, the Roy J. McLean Fellow in Sport History, is a faculty member in the department of kinesiology and health education at the University of Texas at Austin, as well as cofounder of its H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports. She is also the author of two books and coeditor of Iron Game History: The Journal of Physical Culture.

Terry Todd has written seven books, provided commentaries on sports and politics for many years for National Public Radio’s Morning Edition, and done color commentary for strength sports for CBS, NBC, ESPN, and the BBC. He is cofounder of the H.J. Lutcher Stark Center for Physical Culture and Sports at the University of Texas at Austin and coeditor of Iron Game History: The Journal of Physical Culture.

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