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The Ethics of Reproductive Technologies and the Family
Rethinking Kinship
Daniela Cutas (Anthology Editor) , Kristien Hens (Anthology Editor) , Anna Smajdor (Anthology Editor)
- Open Access
The Ethics of Reproductive Technologies and the Family
Rethinking Kinship
Daniela Cutas (Anthology Editor) , Kristien Hens (Anthology Editor) , Anna Smajdor (Anthology Editor)
- Open Access
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Description
This open access book is the first volume on the ethics of intra-familial reproduction, exploring cutting-edge debates and developments in reproductive science and their impact on how we conceptualize kinship.
In recent decades, reproductive technologies have enabled novel uses of family members' reproductive materials (such as gametes or wombs) or functions (such as pregnancy). Reproductive material has been collected from comatose or deceased people at the request of their spouses, and then used in reproduction. Invasive fertility preservation measures have been undertaken on children, at the request of their parents. Mothers have carried their adult offspring´s babies in their wombs in order to help them become parents.
Such examples raise unprecedented ethical challenges. Whose interests ground the creation of offspring using a deceased person's gametes? What is the relation between a mother and the grandchild that she gave birth to; between a deceased man and the children conceived with his sperm; or between the parents of a deceased woman and the baby that they created with her eggs? Contributors to The Ethics of Intra-familial Access to Reproductive Potential explore how these new forms of family connection will only grow in number and complexity as new technologies proliferate. Chapters contribute to ongoing debates on the moral status of children, the importance of genetic reproduction, and the clarification of claims to others' reproductive capacities in the context of the family.
The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation.
Table of Contents
Introduction, Daniela Cutas (Lund University, Sweden), Anna Smajdor and Kristien Hens (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
1. Individual and Familial Interests, Daniela Cutas (Lund University, Sweden) and Mats Johansson (Lund University, Sweden)
2. Does the Israeli Inclusive ART Policy Have Limits? Family Ideology and Challenges Posed by Same-Sex Couples Seeking Intrafamilial Assisted Reproduction, Sigal Gooldin (Israeli Institute for Gender and LGBTQ Studies, Israel) and Yael Hashiloni Dolev (Ben-Gurion University, Israel)
3. The Price of Pregnancy: Was the First Uterus Transplantation Trial Involving Human Participants Ethical? Mats Johansson (Lund University, Sweden) and Daniela Cutas (Lund University, Sweden)
4. Maternal Norms and Maternal Donors in Living Donor Uterus Transplantation, Mianna Lotz (Macquarie University, Australia)
5. Behind a Wall of Prejudice: Intrafamilial Adoptions in Rural Romania, Diana Elena Neaga (Nicolae Titulescu University, Romania) and Valentin Quintus Nicolescu (National University of Political Studies and Public Administration, Romania)
6. State Procreative Interests and Postponed Motherhood, Anna Smajdor (University of Oslo, Norway)
7. Milk Kinship and Polymaternalism, Joke Struyf (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
8. Making Kin? Postgenomic Kinship, Reproductive and Family Ethics, Kristien Hens (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
Index
Product details

Published | 16 Apr 2026 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 176 |
ISBN | 9781350525160 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |