This Article considers important consequences of the commodification of human reproduction. Anyone who has opened a campus newspaper has seen advertisements seeking to match an infertile couple with a young woman who will “donate” her egg (in return for a fee). Some college-age men earn thousands of dollars through regular visits to a sperm bank. The characterization of human ova and sperm cells as transferrable “property” is the very foundation upon which the entire fertility industry rests. But the law of donative transfers has largely ignored the commercial market for human reproductive material. This Article considers how courts and the Internal Revenue Service -- unevenly and incompletely -- treat transfers of human bodily material. Th...
This Article considers the market structure of the human egg (or “oocyte”) donation business, partic...
In this article I examine a recent approach to regulating assisted reproduction, whereby use of some...
In a 2012 case from Canada, the Supreme Court of British Columbia held that sperm acquired and store...
The tax system both reacts to and helps create attitudes about the value of certain behaviors and ch...
Rapid expansion of technology in medicine over the last few decades has both enhanced our lives and ...
The push of biomedical profits and pull of consumer desire for happier and more successful children ...
This Note provides an overview and analysis of the U.S. federal and state laws and institutional pol...
This Article proposes a solution to resolve the legal issues that arise from the disposition of eggs...
[Extract] Recently in the US, bills have been sponsored in a number of states providing for personho...
In the United States and many countries throughout the world, selling non-regenerative organs for mo...
Transfers of human body materials are ubiquitous. From surrogacy arrangements, to sales of eggs, ...
Listing a child for sale in the local paper\u27s classified section is unthinkable, and it is illega...
[Extract] Findlaw recently reported that the US Food and Drug Administration was seeking to stop Tre...
Embryos are all over the news. According to the New York Times there are currently 400,000 frozen em...
Fraud, misrepresentation, and other unfair trade practices plague the market for human reproductive ...
This Article considers the market structure of the human egg (or “oocyte”) donation business, partic...
In this article I examine a recent approach to regulating assisted reproduction, whereby use of some...
In a 2012 case from Canada, the Supreme Court of British Columbia held that sperm acquired and store...
The tax system both reacts to and helps create attitudes about the value of certain behaviors and ch...
Rapid expansion of technology in medicine over the last few decades has both enhanced our lives and ...
The push of biomedical profits and pull of consumer desire for happier and more successful children ...
This Note provides an overview and analysis of the U.S. federal and state laws and institutional pol...
This Article proposes a solution to resolve the legal issues that arise from the disposition of eggs...
[Extract] Recently in the US, bills have been sponsored in a number of states providing for personho...
In the United States and many countries throughout the world, selling non-regenerative organs for mo...
Transfers of human body materials are ubiquitous. From surrogacy arrangements, to sales of eggs, ...
Listing a child for sale in the local paper\u27s classified section is unthinkable, and it is illega...
[Extract] Findlaw recently reported that the US Food and Drug Administration was seeking to stop Tre...
Embryos are all over the news. According to the New York Times there are currently 400,000 frozen em...
Fraud, misrepresentation, and other unfair trade practices plague the market for human reproductive ...
This Article considers the market structure of the human egg (or “oocyte”) donation business, partic...
In this article I examine a recent approach to regulating assisted reproduction, whereby use of some...
In a 2012 case from Canada, the Supreme Court of British Columbia held that sperm acquired and store...