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  1. Everyday Indignities: Using the Microaggressions Framework to Understand Weight Stigma.Lauren Munro - 2017 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (4):502-509.
    In this article, the author reviews the ways that the microaggressions framework has been taken up with regard to weight stigma by academics and activists and offers insight into its value for conceptualizing and challenging weight stigma.
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  • Telling, Hearing, and Believing: A Critical Analysis of Narrative Bioethics.K. M. Saulnier - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (2):297-308.
    Narrative ethics taps into an inherent human need to tell our own stories centred on our own moral values and to have those stories heard and acknowledged. However, not everyone’s words are afforded equal power. The use of narrative ethics in bioethical decision-making is problematized by a disparity in whose stories are told, whose stories are heard, and whose stories are believed. Here, I conduct an analysis of narrative ethics through a critical theory lens to show how entrenched patterns of (...)
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  • What’s Weight Got to Do With It? Mental Health Trainees’ Perceptions of a Client With Anorexia Nervosa Symptoms.Laurie A. S. Veillette, Jose Martinez Serrano & Paula M. Brochu - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  • A Matter of Justice: “Fat” Is Not Necessarily a Bad Word.Lauren Freeman - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (5):11-16.
    This essay argues that the discrimination that fat patients face is an issue of health justice. Insofar as this is the case, bioethicists and health care providers should not only care about it but also work to dismantle the systematic, institutional, social, and individual factors that are contributing to it to ensure that fat patients receive high‐quality health care, free of stigma and discrimination. The essay discusses a variety of ways in which fat patients are discriminated against and considers the (...)
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  • Women With Obesity Are Not as Curvy as They Think: Consequences on Their Everyday Life Behavior.Isabel Urdapilleta, Saadi Lahlou, Samuel Demarchi & Jean-Marc Catheline - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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