“…Kidney exchanges save lives and are broadly viewed as beneficial to humanity; however, as in many resourceconstrained settings, decision-makers must make morallyladen decisions when designing the objective functions, constraints, and other modeling concerns that increasingly run modern exchange programs. The economics, AI, operations research, bioethics, medical, and legal communities have long discussed the moral implications of different approaches to the allocation of organs (see, e.g., Cohen 1989), including kidney exchanges (see, e.g., Ross et al 1997;Minerva, Savulescu, and Singer 2019;Torres et al 2019). Broadly speaking, our proposed work falls into the category of creating a more general, and thus potentially more powerful, model for the exchange of organs, and thus may come with many of the same positive and negative potential ethical impacts.…”