Summary
This article examines the emergence of bioethics at Monash University and Australia during the late-1970s and early-1980s. Unlike bioethics in the USA, which was born a decade earlier during policy debates over human experimentation and withdrawal of treatment, bioethics in Australia initially emerged in the university context via interactions among research scientists working at the forefront of reproductive medicine and philosophers seeking to address issues of public concern. These interactions occurred in a rapidly changing university sector that was moving towards research translation and a new global knowledge economy. Drawing on oral histories with philosophers and medical scientists involved in these events, as well as archival materials, this article uses a co-productionist analytic lens to critically examine how changing institutional norms encouraged mutually beneficial interactions between philosophers and scientists, which shaped the emergence of a new and distinctive field of bioethics in Australia.