Difference between revisions of "Fifth International Symposium"

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* [[Third International Symposium]]
 
* [[Third International Symposium]]
 
* [[Fourth International Symposium]]
 
* [[Fourth International Symposium]]
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* [[Sixth International Symposium]]
  
 
[[Category:Symposium]]
 
[[Category:Symposium]]
 
[[Category:Intactivism]]
 
[[Category:Intactivism]]

Revision as of 22:56, 22 December 2019

The Fifth International Symposium convened at the University of Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom on 5-7 August 1998.

Proceedings

Section 1. Keynote Address

  • Evolutionary Cultural Ethics and Circumcision of Children
— N. Toubia

Section 2. The Anatomy, Physiology, and Histology of the Human Prepuce

  • Anatomy and Physiology of the Human Penis
— S. Scott
  • Anatomy and Histology of the Penile and Clitoral Prepuce in Primates: Evolutionary Perspective of Specialized Sensory Tissue of the External Genitalia
— C. J. Cold and K. A. McGrath
  • Significance and Function of Preputial Langerhans Cells
— G. L. Williams

Section 3. Current Research on Circumcision and Phimosis

  • The History of Phimosis from Antiquity to the Present
F. M. Hodges
  • Diagnosis and Treatment of Phimosis
— S. C. Donnell
  • Anaesthesia for Circumcision: A Review of the Literature
R. S. Van Howe
  • Neonatal Circumcision and HIV Infection
R. S. Van Howe

Section 4. Genital Mutilation: Religious and Cultural Considerations

  • Muslims’ Genitalia in the Hands of the Clergy: Religious Arguments about Male and Femle Circumcision
S. A. Aldeeb Abu-Sahlich
  • Evangelical Christianity and Its Relation to Infant Male Circumcision
J. D. Bigelow
  • A Jewish Perspective on Circumcision
— J. Goodman
  • Circumcision: An African Point of View
— G. B. Tangwa
  • Unifying Language: Religious and Cultural Considerations
— J. P. Baker

Section 5. Psychological Aspects of Genital Mutilation

  • Motivations for Modifications of the Human Body
— G. Zwang
  • Psychoanalysis of Circumcision
— M. Tractenberg
  • Post Trumatic Stress Disorder After Genital Medical Procedures
— J. Menage
  • Tyranny of the Victims: An Analysis of Circumcision Advocacy
G. C. Denniston
  • Epidemiological, Medical, Legal, and Psychological Aspects of Mutilated/At-Risk Girls in Italy: A Bioethical Focus
— P. Grassivaro Gallo, L. Araldi, F. Viviani, and R. Gaddini
  • Circumcision in America in 1998: Attitudes, Beliefs, and Charges of American Physicians
C. R. Fletcher
  • Facing Circumcision: Eight Physicians Tell Their Stories
— B. Katz Sperlich and M. Conant
  • Neonatal from a Primal Health Research Perspective
— M. Odent
  • Celebrating Phallos: Healing Men and Culture
— J. Zoske

Section 6. Foreskin Restoration: Historical and Contemporary Considerations

  • The History of Foreskin Restoration
— D. Schultheiss
  • Current Practices in Foreskin Restoration: The State of Affairs in the United States, and Results of a Survey of Restoring Men
— R. W. Griffiths
  • Foreskin Restoration (Circumcision Reversal)
J. P. Warren
  • The Man Behind Restoration
— M. M. Lander

Section 7. The World-Wide Campaign to End Genital Mutilation

  • A Comprehensive Approach for Communication about Female Genital Mutilation in Egypt
S. Abd el Salam
  • The History of Circumcision in the United States: A Physician’s Perspective
M. L. Sorrells
  • Genital Mutilation in Ireland: A Public Health and Human Rights Report
— L. Massie
  • Challenges to Circumcision in Israel: The Israeli Association Against Genital Mutilation
— A. Zoossmann-Diskin and R. Blustein
  • Activism on the World Wide Web: The Role of the Internet in the Dissemination of Circumcision-Related Information
— M. M. Sarkis

Section 8. Current Problems in Medical Publications

  • Peer-Review Bias Regarding Circumcision in American Medical Publishing: Subverting the Dominant Paradigm
R. S. Van Howe
  • An Analysis of Bias Regarding Circumcision in American Medical Literature
P. M. Fleiss
  • Publication on Circumcision in the Medical Literature: The Role of an Editor
— H. N. Whitfield

Section 9. Legal and Ethical Considerations of Genital Mutilation

  • Circumcision and Virtue Ethics
— M. M. Lander
  • Respect in the Context of Infant Male Circumcisiion: Can Ethics and Law Provide Insights?
— M. A. Somerville
  • Male Non-Therapeutic Circumcision: The Legal and Ethical Issues
— C. Price
  • Attaining International Acknowledgment of Male Genital Mutilation as a Human Rights Violation, and a Written Intervention
J. S. Svoboda
  • Some Thoughts on Legal Remedies
D. J. Llewellyn
  • The Doctor as Expert Witness in United States Courts
J. L. Snyder
  • The Oxford Declaration: A Call for the Prohibition of the Genital Mutilatiion of Children
— C. A. Bonner

The proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium on Sexual Mutilations have been published in Male and Female Circumcision: Medical, Legal, and Ethical Considerations in Pediatric Practice, Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers 1999. New York, Boston, Dordrecht, London, Moscow (ISBN: 0-306-46131-5).

The Symposium was sponsored by the National Organization of Circumcision Information Resource Centers.

See also