Skip to content
  • Inoculate to Imbibe? On the Pub Landlord Who Requires You to be Vaccinated against Covid

    Written by Isra Black and Lisa Forsberg Elsewhere on the blog Tom Douglas has discussed vaccine requirements for commonplace activities, such as going to the pub, created by the state in the form of law or guidance. Let’s call these vaccine requirements ‘state-originating’. Also on the blog, Julian Savulescu has discussed whether ‘immunity passports’ are…

    Read more

  • Is it Irrational Not to Have a Plan? Should There Have Been National Guidance on Rationing in the NHS?

    By Dominic Wilkinson and Jonathan Pugh. This is a crosspost from the Journal of Medical Ethics Blog. This is an output of the UKRI Pandemic Ethics Accelerator project. Last April, in the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of academics, lawyers, doctors and ethicists wrote publicly about the need for national ethical guidance…

    Read more

  • Cross-Post: Self-experimentation with vaccines

    By Jonathan Pugh, Dominic Wilkinson and Julian Savulescu. This is a crosspost from the Journal of Medical Ethics Blog. This is an output of the UKRI Pandemic Ethics Accelerator project.   A group of citizen scientists has launched a non-profit, non-commercial organisation named ‘RaDVaC’, which aims to rapidly develop, produce, and self-administer an intranasally delivered…

    Read more

  • An Ethical Review of Hotel Quarantine Policies For International Arrivals

    Written by: Jonathan Pugh Dominic Wilkinson Julian Savulescu   This is an output of the UKRI Pandemic Ethics Accelerator project – it develops an earlier assessment of the English hotel quarantine policy, published by The Conversation)   The UK has announced that from 15th Feb, British and Irish nationals and others with residency rights travelling to…

    Read more

  • Announcement: Finalists of the 7th Annual Oxford Uehiro Prize in Practical Ethics and Final Presentation

    Please join us in congratulating all of the finalists in the 7th Annual Oxford Uehiro Prize in Practical Ethics. The 7th Annual Oxford Uehiro Prize in Practical Ethics Final Presentation   HT21 Week 8, Wednesday 10th March, 5pm – 6:30 pm. The Presentation will be held via zoom webinar, the registration details of which are below.

    Read more

  • Priority Vaccination for Prison and Homeless Populations

    Written by Ben Davies Last week brought the news that an additional 1.7m people in the UK had been asked to take additional ‘shielding’ measures against COVID-19, following new modelling which considered previously ignored factors such as ethnicity, weight and deprivation. Since many of this group have not yet been vaccinated, they were bumped up…

    Read more

  • Video Series: How To Prevent Future Pandemics

    First interview in the new  Thinking Out Loud series on ‘Animals and Pandemics’: Katrien Devolder in conversation with Jeff Sebo, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies at NYU, on how our treatment of animals increases the risk of future pandemics arising, and on what we should do to reduce that risk!

    Read more

  • Crosspost: Is It Ethical To Quarantine People In Hotel Rooms?

    Written by Dominic Wilkinson and Jonathan Pugh,   The UK government announced that from February 15, British and Irish residents travelling to England from “red list” countries will have to quarantine in a government-sanctioned hotel for ten days, at a personal cost of £1,750. Accommodation must be booked in advance, and people will need to have…

    Read more

  • Cross Post: Not Recommending AstraZeneca Vaccine For The Elderly Risks The Lives Of The Most Vulnerable

    Jonathan Pugh, University of Oxford and Julian Savulescu, University of Oxford Regulators in Europe are at odds over whether the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine should be given to the elderly. In the UK, the vaccine has been approved for use in adults aged 18 and up, but France, Germany, Sweden and Austria say the vaccine should be…

    Read more

  • Ethics of the GameStop Short Squeeze

    By Doug McConnell Recently a large, loosely coordinated group of individual ‘retail investors’ have been buying up stocks that certain hedge funds had bet against (i.e. ‘shorted’). In doing so, the retail investors have driven up the price of those stocks. This has caused hedge funds that shorted the stock to lose billions of dollars…

    Read more