Abstract The use of donor sperm or egg for reproduction raises the issue of the right of donor-conceived individuals to know their genetic origins. This paper argues in favor of acknowledging such a right and explores the challenges that cross-border medically assisted reproduction would raise in relation to it. It first explores possible justifications for such a right by discerning its possible conceptual and empirical groundings. It describes some key ethical and policy implications of the removal of donor anonymity. It then argues that novel technologies such as mitochondrial replacement and gene editing raise new concerns in this area and may expand the scope of such a right. Finally, it argues that while many barriers t...
Genetic relatedness poses significant challenges to traditional practices of medical ethics as conce...
The right to know one’s genetic origins should not be recognised as a moral right because it protect...
Abstract: A sperm donor is the biological father but not the social father of a child conceived thro...
It was not by my choice that my ancestral home is nothing more than a sample jar (Whipp, 2000) T...
Medically assisted fertilization techniques give rise to a wide array of issues, such as the rights ...
Donor conception has been practised for many years, initially as a means of bypassing male fertility...
Over the years a number of countries have abolished anonymous gamete donation and shifted toward ope...
The paper's main goal is to elaborate on the ethical issues that heterologous fertilization has rais...
The field of gamete donation for medically assisted reproduction purposes is evolving. While anonymo...
If over the last couple of decades, advances in reproductive medicine have helped many couples who a...
Do we have a right to know who our genetic parents are? Do donor-conceived individuals have a moral...
Taking into account a recent decree enacted by the Catalan government stipulating the procedure to p...
This paper analyses the complex issues faced by regulators of the infertility treatment industry in ...
Donor conception has been practiced as a medical procedure to bypass first, male, and subsequently ...
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology (Disclosure of Donor Information) Regulations 2004 removed th...
Genetic relatedness poses significant challenges to traditional practices of medical ethics as conce...
The right to know one’s genetic origins should not be recognised as a moral right because it protect...
Abstract: A sperm donor is the biological father but not the social father of a child conceived thro...
It was not by my choice that my ancestral home is nothing more than a sample jar (Whipp, 2000) T...
Medically assisted fertilization techniques give rise to a wide array of issues, such as the rights ...
Donor conception has been practised for many years, initially as a means of bypassing male fertility...
Over the years a number of countries have abolished anonymous gamete donation and shifted toward ope...
The paper's main goal is to elaborate on the ethical issues that heterologous fertilization has rais...
The field of gamete donation for medically assisted reproduction purposes is evolving. While anonymo...
If over the last couple of decades, advances in reproductive medicine have helped many couples who a...
Do we have a right to know who our genetic parents are? Do donor-conceived individuals have a moral...
Taking into account a recent decree enacted by the Catalan government stipulating the procedure to p...
This paper analyses the complex issues faced by regulators of the infertility treatment industry in ...
Donor conception has been practiced as a medical procedure to bypass first, male, and subsequently ...
The Human Fertilisation and Embryology (Disclosure of Donor Information) Regulations 2004 removed th...
Genetic relatedness poses significant challenges to traditional practices of medical ethics as conce...
The right to know one’s genetic origins should not be recognised as a moral right because it protect...
Abstract: A sperm donor is the biological father but not the social father of a child conceived thro...