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The Clay Sanskrit Library
Early American Places
The American Literatures Initiative
NYU Press
838 Broadway, 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10003
1-800-996-6987
Tel: 212-998-2575
Fax: 212-995-3833

Cloth: $29.95
ISBN: 9780814716823
Release Date: 1/01/2009
288 pages, 1 illustrations






Test Tube Families
Why the Fertility Market Needs Legal Regulation
Naomi R. Cahn

The birth of the first test tube baby in 1978 focused attention on the sweeping advances in assisted reproductive technology (ART), which is now a multi-billion-dollar business in the United States. Sperm and eggs are bought and sold in a market that has few barriers to its skyrocketing growth. While ART has been an invaluable gift to thousands of people, creating new families, the use of someone else’s genetic material raises complex legal and public policy issues that touch on technological anxiety, eugenics, reproductive autonomy, identity, and family structure. How should the use of gametic material be regulated? Should recipients be able to choose the best sperm and eggs? Should a child ever be able to discover the identity of her gamete donor? Who can claim parental rights?

Naomi R. Cahn explores these issues and many more in Test Tube Families, noting that although such questions are fundamental to the new reproductive technologies, there are few definitive answers currently provided by the law, ethics, or cultural norms. As a new generation of "donor kids" comes of age, Cahn calls for better regulation of ART, exhorting legal and policy-making communities to cease applying piecemeal laws and instead create legislation that sustains the fertility industry while simultaneously protecting the interests of donors, recipients, and the children that result from successful transfers.




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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Naomi Cahn is John Theodore Fey Research Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School. She is co-author of Families by Law: An Adoption Reader (NYU Press) and co-author of Confinements: Fertility and Infertility in Contemporary Culture.