Results 301 to 310 of about 18,445 (350)
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Exploitation and Commercial Surrogate Motherhood
Human Reproduction & Genetic Ethics, 2001This paper discusses the exploitation argument against commercial surrogacy: the claim that commercial surrogacy is morally objectionable because it is exploitative. The following questions are addressed. First, what exactly does the exploitation argument amount to? Second, is commercial surrogacy in fact exploitative?
McLachlan, H.V., Swales, J.K.
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Legislative Approaches to Surrogate Motherhood
Law, Medicine and Health Care, 1988By the beginning of 1988, nearly six hundred babies had been born through surrogate mothering arrangements. Although there have been a number of lawsuits concerning custody or challenging adoption laws that appear to prohibit payments to surrogates, the majority of surrogacy arrangements proceed without judicial involvement.
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Surrogate Motherhood as Prenatal Adoption
Law, Medicine and Health Care, 1988The recent case of Baby M has brought surrogate motherhood to the forefront of American attention. ultimately, whether we permit or prohibit surrogacy depends on what we take to be good reasons for preventing people from acting as they wish. A growing number of people want to be, or hire, surrogates; are there legitimate reasons to prevent them?
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Israel legalises surrogate motherhood
BMJ, 1996A bill legalising surrogate motherhood and setting down strict controls and limitations has been passed by Israel's parliament a day after regulations barring the practice expired by order of the High Court of Justice. The controversial bill, which was several years in the making, was described by health minister Dr Ephraim Sneh as “a medical and ...
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Taiwan yi xue ren wen xue kan, 2005
A "surrogate mother" is a woman who, for financial or other reasons, agrees to bear a child for another woman who is incapable to conceive herself. In other words, she is a "substitute mother" that conceives, gestates and delivers a baby on behalf of another woman who is subsequently to be seen as the "real" (social and legal) mother of the child ...
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A "surrogate mother" is a woman who, for financial or other reasons, agrees to bear a child for another woman who is incapable to conceive herself. In other words, she is a "substitute mother" that conceives, gestates and delivers a baby on behalf of another woman who is subsequently to be seen as the "real" (social and legal) mother of the child ...
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The Market for Surrogate Motherhood Contracts*
Economic Record, 1997Surrogate motherhood is a controversial subject, and has not previously been formally modelled by economists. In this paper, a neoclassical model of the market for surrogate motherhood contracts is developed, based on the utility maximizing decisions of potential surrogate mothers and commissioning parties.
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