Authors
Gail Davies
Publication date
2006/9/1
Journal
Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers
Volume
31
Issue
3
Pages
257-271
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd (10.1111)
Description
Organ transplantation is now an established treatment for patients with end‐stage organ failure, yet there are spatial inequalities in access to this procedure. This paper explores the uneven geographies of kidney transplantation in London, arguing that inequalities in access to organ transplantation are created through interlocking spatialities of corporeal difference, enacted through global movements of populations, national organ transplantation protocols and the internal immunological spaces of the body. The combination of these processes, operating at different scales, has produced a distinctive configuration in the embodiment of risk in relation to kidney transplants, particularly born by London's Black and Asian communities. Two ethical dimensions to this geography of organ transplantation are explored here: the ethical responsiveness to others shaping the generous practices of organ donation, and the …
Total citations
20072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023124883324253622
Scholar articles