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The problem with commercial surrogacy: A reflection on reproduction, markets and labour

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The problem with commercial surrogacy: A reflection on reproduction, markets and labour. / Savio, Lorenzo Del; Cavaliere, Giulia.
In: Biolaw, Vol. 2016, No. 2, 31.03.2016, p. 73-91.

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Savio LD, Cavaliere G. The problem with commercial surrogacy: A reflection on reproduction, markets and labour. Biolaw. 2016 Mar 31;2016(2):73-91. doi: 10.15168/blj.v0i2.154

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@article{1d858854f0e5402a8efdaf8839d4a3dc,
title = "The problem with commercial surrogacy: A reflection on reproduction, markets and labour",
abstract = "Moral arguments pertaining to commercial surrogate pregnancy have been framed as questions on the appropriate scope of markets. Should pregnancies be conceived and regulated as services that can be exchanged in markets? It has been argued that surrogacy is an exceptional form of labour, and hence inappropriately commodified, because of its nature. Commercial surrogacy involves the bodies and identities of women in a most invasive manner, it negatively affects motherhood and it inappropriately treats babies and surrogates as commodities. We find these argu-ments wanting: the nature of gestational surrogacy does not make it an exceptional form of labour, and indeed the commodification of pregnancy may disrupt oppres-sive conceptions of human reproduction. We argue instead that surrogacy does raise major moral concerns insofar as it may exacerbate extant patterns of domination and exploitation based on international inequities and gender-based discrimination. However, the moral problems of surrogacy extend to wage labour more generally. In other words, surrogate pregnancy is not an exceptional form of labour, but human labour is an exceptional commodity",
keywords = "Surrogacy, Market, Labour, Commodification, Freedom",
author = "Savio, {Lorenzo Del} and Giulia Cavaliere",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.15168/blj.v0i2.154",
language = "English",
volume = "2016",
pages = "73--91",
journal = "Biolaw",
publisher = "University of Trento",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The problem with commercial surrogacy

T2 - A reflection on reproduction, markets and labour

AU - Savio, Lorenzo Del

AU - Cavaliere, Giulia

PY - 2016/3/31

Y1 - 2016/3/31

N2 - Moral arguments pertaining to commercial surrogate pregnancy have been framed as questions on the appropriate scope of markets. Should pregnancies be conceived and regulated as services that can be exchanged in markets? It has been argued that surrogacy is an exceptional form of labour, and hence inappropriately commodified, because of its nature. Commercial surrogacy involves the bodies and identities of women in a most invasive manner, it negatively affects motherhood and it inappropriately treats babies and surrogates as commodities. We find these argu-ments wanting: the nature of gestational surrogacy does not make it an exceptional form of labour, and indeed the commodification of pregnancy may disrupt oppres-sive conceptions of human reproduction. We argue instead that surrogacy does raise major moral concerns insofar as it may exacerbate extant patterns of domination and exploitation based on international inequities and gender-based discrimination. However, the moral problems of surrogacy extend to wage labour more generally. In other words, surrogate pregnancy is not an exceptional form of labour, but human labour is an exceptional commodity

AB - Moral arguments pertaining to commercial surrogate pregnancy have been framed as questions on the appropriate scope of markets. Should pregnancies be conceived and regulated as services that can be exchanged in markets? It has been argued that surrogacy is an exceptional form of labour, and hence inappropriately commodified, because of its nature. Commercial surrogacy involves the bodies and identities of women in a most invasive manner, it negatively affects motherhood and it inappropriately treats babies and surrogates as commodities. We find these argu-ments wanting: the nature of gestational surrogacy does not make it an exceptional form of labour, and indeed the commodification of pregnancy may disrupt oppres-sive conceptions of human reproduction. We argue instead that surrogacy does raise major moral concerns insofar as it may exacerbate extant patterns of domination and exploitation based on international inequities and gender-based discrimination. However, the moral problems of surrogacy extend to wage labour more generally. In other words, surrogate pregnancy is not an exceptional form of labour, but human labour is an exceptional commodity

KW - Surrogacy

KW - Market

KW - Labour

KW - Commodification

KW - Freedom

UR - https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/the-problem-with-commercial-surrogacy(4cbaf485-82ef-497f-acc7-ed17f547c01e).html

U2 - 10.15168/blj.v0i2.154

DO - 10.15168/blj.v0i2.154

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2016

SP - 73

EP - 91

JO - Biolaw

JF - Biolaw

IS - 2

ER -