This article examines the current regulation of surrogacy in England from a children’s rights perspective. It draws on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 and its Optional Protocols, as well as General Comments and Concluding Observations from the Committee on the Rights of the Child, in order to analyse the extent to which the current regulatory framework on surrogacy is in line with a children’s rights approach. A children’s rights approach draws attention to the need for a holistic framework that protects the various rights of children at all stages of their childhood. It stresses the importance of ensuring the framework is participatory, in that it incorporates the views and experiences of children. It also recognises the ...
The significant difference between modernity and past eras is that modernity emphasises choice and a...
Children’s rights have become a significant field of study during the past decades, largely due to t...
The article questions the normative universality of children's rights by considering the ideal defin...
This article considers the legal regulation of surrogacy in the United Kingdom and examines legislat...
This commentary presents an overview of the recent English case law on recognition and regulation of...
This Article argues that most surrogacy arrangements, as currently practiced, constitute the “sale o...
The practice of surrogacy is frequently the subject of media, scientific, social, regulatory and pol...
Surrogacy agreements help to provide children for persons who cannot achieve conception or carry a c...
This article examines the extent to which children, in proceedings affecting their transnational leg...
This article looks at the extent to which children's rights are applicable to the unborn. It focuses...
This chapter argues for the need for the re-regulation of surrogacy. The law in the United Kingdom, ...
This Article addresses the novel question of whether states parties can successfully implement the C...
Any discussion on the development of children's rights must consider the role of the state in activ...
This article argues that the English legislative regime is ineffective in regulating international s...
This article considers particular provisions of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 and the Children Act 20...
The significant difference between modernity and past eras is that modernity emphasises choice and a...
Children’s rights have become a significant field of study during the past decades, largely due to t...
The article questions the normative universality of children's rights by considering the ideal defin...
This article considers the legal regulation of surrogacy in the United Kingdom and examines legislat...
This commentary presents an overview of the recent English case law on recognition and regulation of...
This Article argues that most surrogacy arrangements, as currently practiced, constitute the “sale o...
The practice of surrogacy is frequently the subject of media, scientific, social, regulatory and pol...
Surrogacy agreements help to provide children for persons who cannot achieve conception or carry a c...
This article examines the extent to which children, in proceedings affecting their transnational leg...
This article looks at the extent to which children's rights are applicable to the unborn. It focuses...
This chapter argues for the need for the re-regulation of surrogacy. The law in the United Kingdom, ...
This Article addresses the novel question of whether states parties can successfully implement the C...
Any discussion on the development of children's rights must consider the role of the state in activ...
This article argues that the English legislative regime is ineffective in regulating international s...
This article considers particular provisions of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 and the Children Act 20...
The significant difference between modernity and past eras is that modernity emphasises choice and a...
Children’s rights have become a significant field of study during the past decades, largely due to t...
The article questions the normative universality of children's rights by considering the ideal defin...