This Comment explores the equal protection rights of illegitimate children born to artificially inseminated women in light of the Uniform Parentage Act (UPA), which guarantees equal treatment under the law for all children, and California\u27s adoption of a modified version of the UPA. The author considers the conflict between those rights and the right of unmarried women to procreate and concludes that the California modifications of UPA section 5(b) are unconstitutional because they violate the equal protection rights of illegitimate children born to artificially inseminated women, and that they actually contradict the purpose of the Act. The author suggests that the California law be amended to conform to UPA section 5(b)
The use of assisted reproductive technologies has vastly increased over the last twenty years. Howev...
The state and all parties in a paternity proceeding may benefit from a more efficient, administrativ...
Artificial insemination has found its place, or at least its beginning, in American society. It has ...
This Comment argues that California Family Code section 297.5 dictates that parental rights in both ...
This Comment examines some of the legal issues surrounding the increased use of conception by artifi...
This Comment addresses the issues of surrogate motherhood and argues that certain California statute...
Both courts and legislatures have been loath to establish law in the field of human artificial insem...
The prodigious advancements of biomedical science in human reproduction have brought both blessing ...
California Civil Code Sections 220 and 224 give the mother of an illegitimate child total right to c...
In Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights v. Myers, the California Supreme Court struck down aborti...
The increasing incidence of artificial inseminations in the fifties and sixties resulted in a profus...
This Article questions whether and why it should be unconstitutional to treat legitimate and illegit...
The purpose of this Comment is to encourage the Washington legislature to amend the WPA and to sugge...
This comment begins with the history of the conclusive presumption of paternity in California, from ...
In our time the general constitutional phrase promising equal protection has become specific law. It...
The use of assisted reproductive technologies has vastly increased over the last twenty years. Howev...
The state and all parties in a paternity proceeding may benefit from a more efficient, administrativ...
Artificial insemination has found its place, or at least its beginning, in American society. It has ...
This Comment argues that California Family Code section 297.5 dictates that parental rights in both ...
This Comment examines some of the legal issues surrounding the increased use of conception by artifi...
This Comment addresses the issues of surrogate motherhood and argues that certain California statute...
Both courts and legislatures have been loath to establish law in the field of human artificial insem...
The prodigious advancements of biomedical science in human reproduction have brought both blessing ...
California Civil Code Sections 220 and 224 give the mother of an illegitimate child total right to c...
In Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights v. Myers, the California Supreme Court struck down aborti...
The increasing incidence of artificial inseminations in the fifties and sixties resulted in a profus...
This Article questions whether and why it should be unconstitutional to treat legitimate and illegit...
The purpose of this Comment is to encourage the Washington legislature to amend the WPA and to sugge...
This comment begins with the history of the conclusive presumption of paternity in California, from ...
In our time the general constitutional phrase promising equal protection has become specific law. It...
The use of assisted reproductive technologies has vastly increased over the last twenty years. Howev...
The state and all parties in a paternity proceeding may benefit from a more efficient, administrativ...
Artificial insemination has found its place, or at least its beginning, in American society. It has ...