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Free Download , by Scott Carney

Free Download , by Scott Carney

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, by Scott Carney

, by Scott Carney


, by Scott Carney


Free Download , by Scott Carney

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, by Scott Carney

Product details

File Size: 3169 KB

Print Length: 272 pages

Publisher: HarperCollins e-books; 1 edition (May 31, 2011)

Publication Date: May 31, 2011

Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

Language: English

ASIN: B004FEF6OW

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#620,898 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

We were required to read Scott Carney's book for my Medical Anthropology class...and I was not looking forward to it because the first book we were required to read was a dud.I picked it up and was mesmerized! I know it's cliche, but I could NOT put it down! I'm a forensic anthropology student, so of course the first chapter about the bone trade fascinated, and saddened me. It's a frank, and sometimes horrific romp through the business of life (egg "donation" - for profit, and surrogacy) and death.I truly had never thought about, or heard of these "live donations", and all the abject poverty...it was heartbreaking.This is a thought provoking, heartbreaking, human rights conversation making book; and I, for one, am so thankful for Scott Carny and his will and desire to write such a crucial piece of literature!

The Red Market is a fascinating investigation of various businesses based on the human body. It covers lots of different aspects of trading in the human body and explores both the market dynamics as well as the ethical issues surrounding the businesses. The author sheds light where most of us would rather not look and he shows how the various businesses so easily cross borders and race to the bottom of the socio-economic spectrum. The author discusses lots of different skin businesses including organ donors, adoption agencies, blood donors, medical testing, surrogate mothers and the commodity of hair. All the subjects discussed will be interesting to those who are keen to know how the businesses can work in the darker more sinsiter corners (or mainstream for some).The books chapters are all interesting expositions. It was hard for me to put the book down as each form of trading of the human body has elements that shock the less exposed of us to what poverty and desparation can do. The author starts with an example in the introduction of blood donation and how some academics have shown that when it is seen as a civic duty the quality of the blood is much higher than when seen as a commodity and that the giving of blood is much higher than when the business is designed through the sellign of blood, as the selling "preys" upon the needy and reduces the feel of those who want to help to feel they are as needed. This example sets the stage of how market incentives can fail for a skin business. Such ideas are included in other literature, like Michael Sandel's Justice, but it sets a nice stage.The book continues to analyze through personal stories, many medical businesses based on the trading of the human body. The trading of organs is detailed and one sees that the supplpy side of the organs tends to come from the more desperate countries and within those countries the more desparate people. Also it is shown that the demand side of many organs is not necessarily associated with better medical outcomes and rather often stems from a desire of the medical industry for more business. It is also shown that through networks of middlement the sources of organs is easily ignored as there is no association with the sources. Much of the books chapters show similarities in how businesses are run for those surrounding the human body. For adoption, children are kidnapped, for surrogacy, the surrogates are predominantly poor and need the money, for egg donors, the chapter uses examples predominantly from Russia, for drug testing, the candidates are students, criminals and the destitute.None of the economics of the body businesses are surprising but the message of the book is that the free market should not be the guiding principal of much of the skin business. One should ask ethical questions about whether we are looking at these in the right way. Most western countries have strict rules on most of the businesses the author delves into, but in poorer emerging countries there is a race to the bottom in who participates and the book shows that the businesses are predetorial by nature. It is definitely an interesting read, i think the only thing a bit disingenous is the authors need to focus on demonizing all the businesses (with the exeption of hair) fairly equally. I definiteyl feel there are bad aspects of all the businesses but there are massive differences between the ethics of some of them. Donating eggs for money i would put in a different camp than kidnapping a child to export for adoption (obviously). More time should have been spent on ways to better protect the disenfranchised vs just saying that poverty and desparation makes people make potentially uninformed decisions and that is evil.

I first heard about The Red Market after reading an intriguing Publisher's Weekly interview [...] with author/journo/anthropologist Scott Carney. Based on an investigative journalism series for Mother Jones during 2009 and 2010, Carney delves into the black market trade of the human body - both living and deceased, whole and in part - following a set of circumstances that left him in the guardianship of the corpse of an American student overseas.This is where most reviews would say something like "not for the faint of heart" or something like that and it's true. Carney has taken a very frank (and graphic) look inside the human body trade but he does so without coming off as a sensationalist. Much of his work revolves around India and China - places where poverty and overpopulation have contributed to the profiteering and exploitation of international adoption, kidney/other organ donations and fertility methods (egg harvesting/surrogacy).I expected to be more shocked by accounts like those of an entire village of indigent women in India who saw kidney donation as their only way out of poverty (Note: it never is!) by agreeing to a small amount of money up front only to be swindled out of the additional money they were promised afterwards AND left without post-operative care. I was less shocked by these deceitful methods of procurement than I was by the attitude of the organ donation recipients: I don't care where it comes from or what it costs, just get it.Carney has compiled his work into a quick read that poses excellent moral and ethical questions - and I believe sheds some much-needed light on a grim traffic that few here in the U.S. know or think about. I look forward to more interviews with the author about this work in the coming months.

This book reveals the truth behind markets that many westerners participate in. We choose to ignore the sources of these products because it is convenient. We only care about how it helps us achieve our goals. An insightful read.

This book is about many things I almost never would have considered or expected and it is definitely interesting and a sometimes creepy read. The material was well presented and covered a wide range but I wish Scott Carney spent a little more time on some of the topics. Seemed like the author tried to cover too much too quickly. Along those lines, I was really hoping for some stories and topics from other areas of the world, but this book might as well have been called 'India's Red Market.' Not a bad book, but had the potential to be much more.

Scott Carney takes us on a macabre ride through the world of selling humans and their parts, to a murky and criminal system. It highlights, once again, how the poor are abused and used for the furtherance of the lifestyle of the wealthy around the world. An important book, which should shake us to our collective cores.

Scott Carney took me on a mesmerizing tour of the ‘flesh bazaars’ both foreign and domestic. Proof once again that man can exploit or profit on anything. One thing’s for sure, next time my buddy asks if I’m done with those I’ll make sure he’s pointing at my fries not my kidneys.

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