Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-190).
Contents:
Introduction -- Surrogacy's Emergence, Development, and International Expansion -- Women's Issues -- The Child at the Heart of Surrogacy -- Wanting a Child versus Human Dignity -- The Pieces of the Puzzle -- Conclusion.
Summary:
Contracting surrogate mothers is no longer marginal. Nor is it secret. Surrogacy is growing rapidly even though no informed debate on the social impacts of its normalization has been conducted. It is even regarded as socially progressive, while those who question it are considered to be opposed to progress. The surrogacy process commissioning a woman to bear and give birth to a child and then surrender it is vitiated by its contractual nature, be it in its so-called altruistic form (i.e., no exchange of money) or the straight-forward commercial form. It is an attack on the human dignity and equal gender rights of surrogate mothers, but also a denial of the rights of the contracted child to come, who is so often forgotten in the process. Current inconsistent or contradictory legislation has led to a fait accompli approach to the question. It's being done, so let's just regulate it, say its defenders. Other countries that have followed that logic have seen an increase in both demand for surrogates and recourse to shrewd international brokers. In many cases, international simply means the surrogate mother is from a poor country with lax legislation, the commissioning parents, from rich countries. By examining the surrogacy process and all its implications, Maria De Koninck reaches the conclusion that the best way forward is an international ban on surrogacy.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.