#2397. Patents as Vehicles of Social and Moral Concerns: The Case of Johnson & Johnson Disposable Feminine Hygiene Products (1925–20XX)

November 2026publication date
Proposal available till 30-05-2025
4 total number of authors per manuscript3510 $

The title of the journal is available only for the authors who have already paid for
Journal’s subject area:
Philosophy;
Anthropology;
Social Sciences (miscellaneous);
Sociology and Political Science;
Economics and Econometrics;
Human-Computer Interaction;
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Abstract:
The article analyzes how moral and social issues have been embedded (or not) in technology, using the example of disposable feminine hygiene products. The research methodology is built on the classic computer analysis of patents published by Johnson & Johnson for almost a century (1925–20XX). The results show how hygiene products were targeted at women, how these products became disposable, and how the concept of disposable has changed, both at the heart of technology and in the broader space of “interested” markets.
Keywords:
concerns; environment; feminine hygiene products; health; patents

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