Vaccine court : the law and politics of injury / Anna Kirkland.
2016
KF3808 .K57 2016 (Map It)
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Details
Title
Vaccine court : the law and politics of injury / Anna Kirkland.
Published
New York : New York University Press, [2016]
Call Number
KF3808 .K57 2016
ISBN
9781479876938 (cl ; alk. paper)
1479876933 (cl ; alk. paper)
1479876933 (cl ; alk. paper)
Description
xi, 273 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)950624060
Summary
The so-called vaccine court is a small special court in the United States Court of Federal Claims that handles controversial claims that a vaccine has harmed someone. While vaccines in general are extremely safe and effective, some people still suffer severe vaccine reactions and bring their claims to vaccine court. In this court, lawyers, activists, judges, doctors, and scientists come together, sometimes arguing bitterly, trying to figure out whether a vaccine really caused a person?s medical problem. In Vaccine Court, Anna Kirkland draws on the trials of the vaccine court to explore how legal institutions resolve complex scientific questions. What are vaccine injuries, and how do we come to recognize them? What does it mean to transform these questions into a legal problem and funnel them through a special national vaccine court, as we do in the U.S.? What does justice require for vaccine injury claims, and how can we deliver it? These are highly contested questions, and the terms in which they have been debated over the last forty years are highly revealing of deeper fissures in our society over motherhood, community, health, harm, and trust in authority. While many scholars argue that it?s foolish to let judges and lawyers decide medical claims about vaccines, Kirkland argues that our political and legal response to vaccine injury claims shows how well legal institutions can handle specialized scientific matters. Vaccine Court is an accessible and thorough account of what the vaccine court is, why we have it, and what it does.
Note
Also available as an ebook.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-257) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction: Our Immunization Social Order
1
1.
How Are Vaccines Political?
33
2.
Solution of the Vaccine Court
65
3.
Health and Rights in the Vaccine-Critical Movement
96
4.
Knowing Vaccine Injury through Law
117
5.
What Counts as Evidence?
146
6.
Autism Showdown
172
Conclusion: The Epistemic Politics of the Vaccine Court
199
Notes
217
Index
259
About the Author
273