Reproduction, Ethics and the Law
Feminist Perspectives
Joan C. Callahan(Author)
Indiana University Press
Published on 1. November 1995
Book
Hardback
440 pages
978-0-253-32938-7 (ISBN)
Description
"Reproduction, Ethics, and the Law" addresses some of the most pressing moral and legal quandaries in contemporary society - those revolving around human reproduction. Technology can both limit and assist childbearing. Courts have assigned legal parenthood to genetic parents of children carried to term by women genetically unrelated to them, and courts have also passed over genetic progenitors to assign parenthood to individuals socially related to children. With developments in medical and surgical interventions for foetus', we have also seen court cases holding women responsible for causing prenatal harm, as well as a landmark Supreme Court decision that might well release industry from liability for causing prenatal harm in the workplace.Scientists are able to use tissue from aborted fetuses to substantially alter the quality of life for persons afflicted with progressive, debilitating disease, and they are now able to fertilize and implant in women's wombs eggs harvested from aborted female fetuses.
Physicians are able to sustain infants with no hope for characteristically human lives long enough to make their organs available to other infants in vital need; and they are able to perform prenatal diagnoses that encourage elective abortion.This collection of essays adds to the feminist dimension of the public discussion of how these issues should be addressed. The contributors broaden the discussion considerably in focusing on issues beyond abortion and reproductive technologies, bringing together such themes as surrogacy, adoption, and infertility; frozen embryos and fathers rights; RU 486; foetal harm; and industrial health hazards for women. This volume brings together feminist social and philosophical theory with a practical awareness of concrete social problems and an understanding of new technologies. The contributors are Barbara J. Berg, Joan E. Bertin, Joan C. Callahan, Janet Gallagher, Helen B. Holmes, Joan Mahoney, Mary B. Mahowald, Uma Narayan, Christine Overall, Laura Purdy, Mary L. Shanley, Janice G. Raymond, Patricia Smith, and Rosemarie Tong.
Physicians are able to sustain infants with no hope for characteristically human lives long enough to make their organs available to other infants in vital need; and they are able to perform prenatal diagnoses that encourage elective abortion.This collection of essays adds to the feminist dimension of the public discussion of how these issues should be addressed. The contributors broaden the discussion considerably in focusing on issues beyond abortion and reproductive technologies, bringing together such themes as surrogacy, adoption, and infertility; frozen embryos and fathers rights; RU 486; foetal harm; and industrial health hazards for women. This volume brings together feminist social and philosophical theory with a practical awareness of concrete social problems and an understanding of new technologies. The contributors are Barbara J. Berg, Joan E. Bertin, Joan C. Callahan, Janet Gallagher, Helen B. Holmes, Joan Mahoney, Mary B. Mahowald, Uma Narayan, Christine Overall, Laura Purdy, Mary L. Shanley, Janice G. Raymond, Patricia Smith, and Rosemarie Tong.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Bloomington, IN
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 242 mm
Width: 160 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-253-32938-7 (9780253329387)
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Schweitzer Classification
Content
Acknowledgments EditorsOs Preface: Reproduction, Ethics, and the Law: Feminist Perspectives Part I: Reconsidering Parenthood Introduction 1. Adoption as a Feminist Alternative to Reproductive Technology N Joan Mahoney 2. Feminist Perspectives and Gestational Motherhood: The Search for a Unified Legal Focus N Rosemarie Tong 3. Listening to the Voices of the Infertile N Barbara J. Berg 4. The Metamorphosis of Motherhood N Patricia Smith Part II: Prenatal and Postnatal Authority Introduction 5. Choosing ChildrenOs Sex: Challenges to Feminism N Helen B. Holmes 6. Frozen Embryos and OFathersO RightsO: Parenthood and Decision-Making in the Cryopreservation of Embryos N Christine Overall 7. As If There Were Fetuses Without Women: A Remedial Essay N Mary B. Mahowald 8. FathersO Rights, MothersO Wrongs?: Reflections on Unwed FathersO Rights, Patriarchy, and Sex Equality N Mary L. Shanley Part III: Electing and Preventing Birth Introduction 9. Ensuring a Stillborn: The Ethics of Lethal Injection in Late Abortion N Joan C. Callahan 10. RU 486: Progress or Peril? N Janice G. Raymond 11. Loving Future People N Laura M. Purdy Part IV: Prenatal and Preconceptive Harm 12. Collective Bad Faith: OProtectingO the Fetus N Janet Gallagher 13. A Womb of OneOs Own N Joan E. Bertin 14. The Discriminatory Nature of Industrial Health-Hazard Policies and Some Implication for Third-World Women Workers N Uma Narayan Contributors Index