Regulating Creation : The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction /
"In 2004, the Assisted Human Reproduction Act was passed by the Parliament of Canada. Fully in force by 2007, the act was intended to safeguard the health and safety of Canadians. However, a 2010 Supreme Court of Canada decision ruled that key parts of the act were invalid. Regulating Creation...
Otros Autores: | , , , |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London :
University of Toronto Press,
[2017]
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction / Trudo Lemmens, Andrew Flavelle Martin
- Part one : Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and constitutional law and federalism perspectives
- A historical introduction to the Supreme Court's decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act / Bernard M. Dickens
- Licensing and the AHRA Reference / Ian B. Lee
- The federalism implications of the Assisted Human Reproduction Act Reference / Hoi L. Kong
- Federal and provincial jurisdictions with respect to health: struggles amid symbiosis / Glenn Rivard.
- Part two: Family law and children's rights perspectives
- Determining parentage in cases involving assisted reproduction: an urgent need for provincial legislative action / Carol Rogerson
- The right to know one's origins, the AHRA Reference, and Pratten v. AGBC: a call for provincial legislative action / Michelle Giroux, Cheryl Milne
- A number but no name: is there a constitutional right to know one's sperm donor in Canadian law? / Vanessa Gruben
- The priority of the health and well-being of offspring: the challenge of Canadian provincial and territorial adoption disclosure law to anonymity in gamete and embryo provision ("donor" conception) / Juliet R. Guichon
- A time for change? The divergent approaches of Canada and New Zealand to donor conception and donor identification / Jeanne Snelling
- What adoption law suggests about donor anonymity policies: a UK perspective / Jennifer M. Speirs.
- Part three: Commodification and commercialization of assisted human reproduction, access and funding of AHR, and the role of law
- Assisted reproductive technology use among neighbours: commercialization concerns in Canada and the United States, in the global context / Lisa C. Ikemoto
- Fruitful diversity: revisiting the enforceability of gestational carriage contracts / Susan G. Drummond
- Listening to LGBTQ people on assisted human reproduction: access to reproductive material, services, and facilities / Stu Marvel, Lesley A. Tarasoff, Rachel Epstein, Datejie Green, Leah S. Steele, Lori E. Ross
- Regulatory failure: the case of the private-for-profit IVF sector / Colleen M. Flood, Bryan Thomas
- Great expectations: access to assisted reproductive services and reproductive rights / Sarah Hudson
- The commodification of gametes: why prohibiting untrammelled commercialization matters / Trudo Lemmens.
- Appendix: Expert reports
- Appendix 1: Quebec: a pioneer in the regulation of AHR and research in Canada (expert opinion for the government of Quebec) / Bartha Maria Knoppers, Élodie Petit
- Appendix 2: The regulation of assisted human reproductive technologies and related research: a public health, safety and morality argument (expert opinion for the federal government) / Françoise Baylis
- Appendix 3: Response to the second opinion of Françoise Baylis / Bartha Maria Knoppers.