Genetics and Reproductive Technology: Legal & Ethical Issues

  • I. Glenn Cohen (Harvard Law School)
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1 Background on Reproductive Technology 1 Background on Reproductive Technology

1.1. Debora Spar, The Baby Business (2006)

Debora Spar, The Baby Business (2006)

1.2. Elizabeth Bartholet, Family Bonds (1999)

Elizabeth Bartholet, Family Bonds (1999)
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Genetics and Reproductive Technology: Legal & Ethical Issues

I. Glenn Cohen

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Table of contents

  1. 1

    Background on Reproductive Technology

    1. 1.1

      Debora Spar, The Baby Business (2006)

    2. 1.2

      Elizabeth Bartholet, Family Bonds (1999)

  2. 2

    Commodification and the Buying and Selling of Reproductive Materials

  3. 3

    Sperm Donation and Paternity

  4. 4

    Surrogacy

  5. 5

    Preembryo Disposition

  6. 6

    Posthumous Reproduction

  7. 7

    Anonymity in Sperm and Egg 'Donation'

  8. 8

    Wrongful Birth, Wrongful Life, the Non-Identity Problem

  9. 9

    Carrier Screening, PGD, and Selection (including Sex Selection)

  10. 10

    “Savior Siblings”

  11. 11

    Who Should Pay for Reproductive Technology?/Reproductive Technology and Adoption

  12. 12

    Maternal-Fetal Conflicts and Restrictions on Pregnant Women

  13. 13

    Genetic Tests and Family Members: Obligations to Disclose?

  14. 14

    Human Enhancement

  15. 15

    Intentional Diminishment

  16. 16

    Synthetic Biology

  17. 17

    Patenting Genes

  18. 18

    The Ownership of Tissue and Its Derivatives

  19. 19

    Forensic Use of Genetics

  20. 20

    Stem Cells

  21. 21

    Chimeras

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