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12. Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts

  • Susan G. Drummond
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Regulating Creation
This chapter is in the book Regulating Creation
© 2018 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

© 2018 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Introduction 1
  4. Part One: Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and Constitutional Law and Federalism Perspectives
  5. 1. A Historical Introduction to the Supreme Court’s Decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act 23
  6. 2. Licensing and the AHRA Reference 34
  7. 3. The Federalism Implications of the Assisted Human Reproduction Act Reference 44
  8. 4. Federal and Provincial Jurisdictions with Respect to Health: Struggles amid Symbiosis 63
  9. Part Two: Family Law and Children’s Rights Perspectives
  10. 5. Determining Parentage in Cases Involving Assisted Reproduction: An Urgent Need for Provincial Legislative Action 91
  11. 6. The Right to Know One’s Origins, the AHRA Reference, and Pratten v AGBC: A Call for Provincial Legislative Action 124
  12. 7. A Number but No Name: Is There a Constitutional Right to Know One’s Sperm Donor in Canadian Law? 145
  13. 8. 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) 178
  14. 9. A Time for Change? The Divergent Approaches of Canada and New Zealand to Donor Conception and Donor Identification 206
  15. 10. What Adoption Law Suggests about Donor Anonymity Policies: A UK Perspective 232
  16. Part Three: Commodification and Commercialization of Assisted Human Reproduction, Access and Funding of AHR, and the Role of Law
  17. 11. Assisted Reproductive Technology Use among Neighbours: Commercialization Concerns in Canada and the United States, in the Global Context 253
  18. 12. Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts 274
  19. 13. Listening to LGBTQ People on Assisted Human Reproduction: Access to Reproductive Material, Services, and Facilities 325
  20. 14. Regulatory Failure: The Case of the Private-for-Profit IVF Sector 359
  21. 15. Great Expectations: Access to Assisted Reproductive Services and Reproductive Rights 389
  22. 16. The Commodification of Gametes: Why Prohibiting Untrammelled Commercialization Matters 415
  23. Appendix: Expert Reports
  24. Appendix 1: Quebec: A Pioneer in the Regulation of AHR and Research in Canada [Expert Opinion for the Government of Quebec] 463
  25. 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] 490
  26. Appendix 3: Response to the Second Opinion of Françoise Baylis 529
  27. Contributors 535
  28. Index 539
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