Ethics Untangled Podcast Por Jim Baxter arte de portada

Ethics Untangled

Ethics Untangled

De: Jim Baxter
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Ethics Untangled is a series of conversations about the ethical issues that affect all of us, with academics who have spent some time thinking about them. It is brought to you by the IDEA Centre, a specialist unit for teaching, research, training and consultancy in Applied Ethics at the University of Leeds.

Find out more about IDEA, including our Masters programmes in Healthcare Ethics and Applied and Professional Ethics, our PhDs and our consultancy services, here:

ahc.leeds.ac.uk/ethics

Ethics Untangled is edited by Mark Smith at Leeds Media Services.
Music is by Kate Wood.

© 2025 Ethics Untangled
Ciencias Sociales Filosofía
Episodios
  • 42. How Should Clinicians Communicate with Young People Experiencing Mental Health Difficulties? With Lisa Bortolotti
    Jul 7 2025

    Professor Lisa Bortolotti is a philosopher at the University of Birmingham, who has been working on a fascinating interdisciplinary project looking at what happens when young people experiencing mental health difficulties talk to clinicians about those difficulties. The project has involved closely examining hours of audio and video material of these encounters, as well as talking to the young people themselves, in the hope of gaining insights which can help clinicians improve their practice. Emerging from the work has been a focus on agency and the agential stance. We discuss what that means and why it's important, drawing on some examples from the project.

    Links to further reading:

    Agency project page on the McPin Foundation website: https://mcpin.org/project/agency/ (has a lot of open access resources)

    Three relevant open access papers:

    • L Bortolotti (2025). Agential Epistemic Injustice in Clinical Interactions Is Bad for Medicine. Philosophy of Medicine 6 (1), 1-19.
    • C Bergen, L Bortolotti, R Temple, et al. (2023). Implying implausibility and undermining versus accepting peoples’ experiences of suicidal ideation and self-harm in Emergency Department psychosocial assessments. Frontiers in Psychiatry 14.
    • C Bergen, L Bortolotti, K Tallent, et al. (2022). Communication in youth health clinical encounters: Introducing the agential stance. Theory & Psychology 32 (5), 667-690.

    Ethics Untangled is produced by IDEA, The Ethics Centre at the University of Leeds.

    Bluesky: @ethicsuntangled.bsky.social
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ideacetl
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idea-ethics-centre/

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    50 m
  • 41. How Should We Rebuild Trust in Journalism? With Tim Watkin
    Jun 16 2025

    Tim Watkin is a journalist and media manager. He works as executive editor for audio at Radio New Zealand, but is currently on sabbatical at the University of Glasgow, studying how to rebuild trust in journalism as part of a project on Epistemic Autonomy. In this interview we discuss the nature of trust, why it's important, why journalists seem to be losing the public's trust, whose fault this is, and what might be done about it.

    Ethics Untangled is produced by IDEA, The Ethics Centre at the University of Leeds.

    Bluesky: @ethicsuntangled.bsky.social
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ideacetl
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idea-ethics-centre/

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    47 m
  • 40. How do you decide whether law enforcement and national security operations are ethically justified? With Joe Fogarty
    Jun 2 2025

    Joe Fogarty has spent over 30 years working in national security and law enforcement, in the UK and elsewhere. He's currently working on cyber-security risks and organised crime for the UK's central government, as the Head of the Government's Cyber Resilience Centre. Recently, he's been looking at security and law enforcement through a philosophical lens, through studying for a Masters in Applied and Professional Ethics at IDEA, the Ethics Centre at the University of Leeds. One of the big questions for these areas of work is how to balance privacy concerns against the public good, and we discuss that question, among others, in this interview.

    Some extra reading suggested by Joe:

    Omand, D. 2023. Examining the Ethics of Spying: A Practitioner’s View. Criminal Law and Philosophy. https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s11572-023-09704-5). [Online]. Available from https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11572-023-09704-5.

    Omand, D. and Phythian, M. 2023. Principled Spying - The Ethics of Secret Intelligence. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at https://uk.bookshop.org/p/books/principled-spying-the-ethics-of-secret-intelligence-david-omand/3583190.

    Fabre, C. 2022. Spying Through A Glass Darkly. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at https://www.amazon.co.uk/Spying-Through-Glass-Darkly-Counter-Intelligence/dp/019891217X.

    And if listeners are interested in a view from the top of the domestic national security establishment, there is an excellent Reith Lecture by former Head of MI5 Eliza Manningham-Buller here, which echoes some of the themes in the podcast:

    BBC Radio 4. 2011. Eliza Manningham-Buller - Securing Freedom: Security. [Online]. Available from http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/rmhttp/radio4/transcripts/2011_reith4.pdf.

    Ethics Untangled is produced by IDEA, The Ethics Centre at the University of Leeds.

    Bluesky: @ethicsuntangled.bsky.social
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ideacetl
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idea-ethics-centre/

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    50 m
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