The use of assisted reproductive treatment to conceive a child provides the opportunity for the state and/or medical practitioners to play a role in deciding who should or should not become a parent. This article explores the primary criteria used to “screen” people wishing to use assisted reproductive treatment and to exclude them from treatment in some circumstances. It argues that idiosyncratic judgment or general legal presumptions against treatment are not satisfactory, as they are unlikely to predict whether the best interests of a child born as a result of assisted reproductive treatment will be compromised. Rather, such judgments may serve to be discriminatory, and are often misinformed. The author suggests that the law and society ...
The revolution in IVF treatment in recent years has resulted in the conception of over 4 million bab...
Advances in assisted reproductive technology and genetic testing continue to offer parents a plethor...
Journal ArticleMalek and Daar [M&D] argue that parents have a duty to employ prenatal genetic diagno...
The use of assisted reproductive treatment to conceive a child provides the opportunity for the stat...
The use of assisted reproductive treatment (ART) to conceive a child provides the opportunity for th...
In this article I examine a recent approach to regulating assisted reproduction, whereby use of some...
© 2019 Georgina HallIndividuals seeking to reproduce non-sexually require access to assisted reprodu...
Advancements in reproductive technology have expanded the influence that parents can have on their c...
Decades after the advent of assisted reproductive technology ( ART ) that allows prospective parents...
The threshold requirement for surrogate motherhood entails that a commissioning parent or parents mu...
Technological innovation possesses both opportunity and challenge. Because assisted reproductive tec...
Different jurisdictions take different approaches to whether screening people before permitting acce...
Recent advances in assisted reproductive technologies as well as in preconception, preimplantation, ...
This article reports findings from a study of interviews with 66 members of staff working in assiste...
Assessment of the psychological and social circumstances of candidates for assisted reproduction is ...
The revolution in IVF treatment in recent years has resulted in the conception of over 4 million bab...
Advances in assisted reproductive technology and genetic testing continue to offer parents a plethor...
Journal ArticleMalek and Daar [M&D] argue that parents have a duty to employ prenatal genetic diagno...
The use of assisted reproductive treatment to conceive a child provides the opportunity for the stat...
The use of assisted reproductive treatment (ART) to conceive a child provides the opportunity for th...
In this article I examine a recent approach to regulating assisted reproduction, whereby use of some...
© 2019 Georgina HallIndividuals seeking to reproduce non-sexually require access to assisted reprodu...
Advancements in reproductive technology have expanded the influence that parents can have on their c...
Decades after the advent of assisted reproductive technology ( ART ) that allows prospective parents...
The threshold requirement for surrogate motherhood entails that a commissioning parent or parents mu...
Technological innovation possesses both opportunity and challenge. Because assisted reproductive tec...
Different jurisdictions take different approaches to whether screening people before permitting acce...
Recent advances in assisted reproductive technologies as well as in preconception, preimplantation, ...
This article reports findings from a study of interviews with 66 members of staff working in assiste...
Assessment of the psychological and social circumstances of candidates for assisted reproduction is ...
The revolution in IVF treatment in recent years has resulted in the conception of over 4 million bab...
Advances in assisted reproductive technology and genetic testing continue to offer parents a plethor...
Journal ArticleMalek and Daar [M&D] argue that parents have a duty to employ prenatal genetic diagno...