The main goal of the code of ethics should be to protect human and animals from deceitful and immoral experimentation. In the past, biomedical research projects, such as the Tuskegee experiment (Brandt, 1978) and the University of Chicago malaria project (Harcourt, 2011) exploited disadvantaged populations. …show more content…
Specifically, he explores the complexities of the feeling of belonging in Mexican immigrant populations who are unsure where to call ‘home’. This article is important to me because it reminds me how my parents experienced when they migrated to the US mainland from Puerto Rico. They moved in hopes of providing a better life for me the rest of extended family in Puerto Rico. Since I grew up in a semi-Hispanic culture, I know how family is very important and central to our culture. Thus, while reading Striffler’s article, I was able to relate to Mexican immigrants who left to work in the US and collect money to sustain their families back in Mexico. Similar to how Mexican immigrants who were exploited by US food industries, my parents are experiencing similar exploitations from the government and their jobs. Although the level of severity for economic stability probably not the same, my parents are bound to live in low-income housing similar to how Mexican immigrants were forced to shift to permanent residence in the US. Additionally, my parents raised in a predominantly American culture with a little bit of Hispanic culture. Although I was not born in Puerto Rico, a part of me still feels that “home” is there because Puerto Rico is where my family is. This is similar to how the decedents of Mexican immigrants visit their “home” in Santo