Regulating Reproductive Donation
Work detail
"The emergence of new empirical evidence and ethical debate about families created by assisted reproduction has called into question the current regulatory frameworks that govern reproductive donation in many countries. In this multidisciplinary book, social scientists, ethicists and lawyers offer fresh perspectives on the current challenges facing the regulation of reproductive donation and suggest possible ways forward. They address questions such as: what might people want to know about the circumstances of their conception? Should we limit the number of children donors can produce? Is it wrong to pay donors or to reward them with cut-price fertility treatments? Is overseas surrogacy exploitative of women from poor communities? Combining the latest empirical research with analysis of ethics, policy and legislation, the book focuses on the regulation of gamete and embryo donation and surrogacy at a time when more people are considering assisted reproduction and when new techniques and policies are underway"--Publisher's website.
Overview
Shared work-level identity and catalog context.
Contributors
People credited with this work in the active catalog.
- Open Author
Martin P. M. Richards
- Open Author
Rosamund Scott
- Open Author
Stephen Wilkinson
- Open Author
John B. Appleby
- Open Author
Susan Golombok
Editions
Publication-specific versions linked to this work only.
- Image source: Open LibraryRR
Regulating Reproductive Donation
1 views - RRRegulating Reproductive DonationSusan Golombok, Rosamund Scott, Stephen Wilkinson, Martin P. M. Richards, John B. Appleby
Regulating Reproductive Donation
- RRRegulating Reproductive DonationSusan Golombok, Rosamund Scott, John B. Appleby, Martin P. M. Richards, Stephen Wilkinson
Regulating Reproductive Donation
- RRRegulating Reproductive DonationSusan Golombok, Rosamund Scott, John B. Appleby, Martin P. M. Richards, Stephen Wilkinson
Regulating Reproductive Donation