Global Trade and Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Regulatory Challenges in International Surrogacy

Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (1):240-253 (2013)
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Abstract

Lawyers tend to look to the law to resolve disputes and to create certainty about the rights and responsibilities of parties to relationships. There is a particularly acute need for certainty in the context of global trade in surrogacy services, both because of the number of parties who may be involved in creating familial relationships and because of the vulnerabilities created as a result of surrogacy arrangements. Participants in the Global Health Challenges conference were invited to consider to what extent law is implicated in global health challenges — both in terms of how law might help to resolve the challenges, and, how law might contribute to or create these challenges.

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