Regulating Creation
The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Herausgeber: Lemmens, Trudo; Lee, Ian B; Milne, Cheryl; Martin, Andrew Flavell
Regulating Creation
The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Herausgeber: Lemmens, Trudo; Lee, Ian B; Milne, Cheryl; Martin, Andrew Flavell
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Regulating Creation is a collection of essays featuring contributions by Canadian and international scholars. It offers a variety of perspectives on the role of law in dealing with the legal, ethical, and policy issues surrounding changing reproductive technologies.
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Regulating Creation is a collection of essays featuring contributions by Canadian and international scholars. It offers a variety of perspectives on the role of law in dealing with the legal, ethical, and policy issues surrounding changing reproductive technologies.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 560
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 830g
- ISBN-13: 9781442614574
- ISBN-10: 1442614579
- Artikelnr.: 45064346
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 560
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 830g
- ISBN-13: 9781442614574
- ISBN-10: 1442614579
- Artikelnr.: 45064346
Edited by Trudo Lemmens, Andrew Flavelle Martin, Cheryl Milne, and Ian B. Lee
List of Contributors
Trudo Lemmens & Andrew Flavelle Martin Introduction
Part 1: Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and
Constitutional Law and Federalism Perspectives
Chapter 1: Bernard M. Dickens An Historical Introduction to the Supreme
Court’s Decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act
Chapter 2: Ian B Lee Licensing and the AHRA Reference
Chapter 3: Hoi Kong The Federalism Implications of the Assisted Human
Reproduction Act Reference
Chapter 4: Glenn Rivard Federal and Provincial Jurisdictions with respect
to Health: Struggles amid Symbiosis
Part 2: Family Law and Children’s Rights Perspectives
Chapter 5: Carol Rogerson Determining Parentage in Cases Involving Assisted
Reproduction: An Urgent Need for Provincial Legislative Action
Chapter 6: Michelle Giroux & Cheryl Milne The Right to Know One’s Origins,
the AHRA Reference and Pratten v AGBC: A Call for Provincial Legislative
Action
Chapter 7: Vanessa Gruben A Number but No Name: Is There a Constitutional
Right to Know One’s Sperm Donor in Canadian Law?
Chapter 8: Juliet Guichon 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)
Chapter 9: Jeanne Snelling A Time for Change? The Divergent Approach of
Canada and New Zealand to Donor Conception and Donor Identification
Chapter 10: Jennifer M. Speirs What adoption law suggests about donor
anonymity policies: a UK perspective
Part 3: Commodification and commercialization of Assisted Human
Reproduction, Access and Funding of AHR, and the Role of Law
Chapter 11: Lisa C. Ikemoto Assisted Reproductive Technology Use among
Neighbors: Commercialization Concerns in Canada and the United States, in
the Global Context
Chapter 12: Susan G. Drummond Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the
Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts
Chapter 13: Stu Marvel et al Listening to LGBTQ People on Assisted Human
Reproduction: Access to Reproductive Material, Services and Facilities
Chapter 14: Colleen M Flood & Bryan Thomas, Regulatory Failure: The Case of
the Private-For-Profit IVF Sector
Chapter 15: Sarah Hudson Great Expectations: Access to Assisted
Reproductive Services and Reproductive Rights
Chapter 16: Trudo Lemmens The Commodification of Gametes: Why Prohibiting
Untrammelled Commercialization Matters
Appendix: Expert Reports
Appendix 1: Françoise Baylis The Regulation of Assisted Human Reproductive
Technologies and Related Research: A Public Health, Safety and Morality
Argument [Expert Opinion for the Federal Government]
Appendix 2: Bartha M. Knoppers & Élodie Petit Quebec: A pioneer in the
Regulation of AHR and Reserch in Canada [Expert Opinion for the Government
of Quebec]
Trudo Lemmens & Andrew Flavelle Martin Introduction
Part 1: Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and
Constitutional Law and Federalism Perspectives
Chapter 1: Bernard M. Dickens An Historical Introduction to the Supreme
Court’s Decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act
Chapter 2: Ian B Lee Licensing and the AHRA Reference
Chapter 3: Hoi Kong The Federalism Implications of the Assisted Human
Reproduction Act Reference
Chapter 4: Glenn Rivard Federal and Provincial Jurisdictions with respect
to Health: Struggles amid Symbiosis
Part 2: Family Law and Children’s Rights Perspectives
Chapter 5: Carol Rogerson Determining Parentage in Cases Involving Assisted
Reproduction: An Urgent Need for Provincial Legislative Action
Chapter 6: Michelle Giroux & Cheryl Milne The Right to Know One’s Origins,
the AHRA Reference and Pratten v AGBC: A Call for Provincial Legislative
Action
Chapter 7: Vanessa Gruben A Number but No Name: Is There a Constitutional
Right to Know One’s Sperm Donor in Canadian Law?
Chapter 8: Juliet Guichon 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)
Chapter 9: Jeanne Snelling A Time for Change? The Divergent Approach of
Canada and New Zealand to Donor Conception and Donor Identification
Chapter 10: Jennifer M. Speirs What adoption law suggests about donor
anonymity policies: a UK perspective
Part 3: Commodification and commercialization of Assisted Human
Reproduction, Access and Funding of AHR, and the Role of Law
Chapter 11: Lisa C. Ikemoto Assisted Reproductive Technology Use among
Neighbors: Commercialization Concerns in Canada and the United States, in
the Global Context
Chapter 12: Susan G. Drummond Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the
Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts
Chapter 13: Stu Marvel et al Listening to LGBTQ People on Assisted Human
Reproduction: Access to Reproductive Material, Services and Facilities
Chapter 14: Colleen M Flood & Bryan Thomas, Regulatory Failure: The Case of
the Private-For-Profit IVF Sector
Chapter 15: Sarah Hudson Great Expectations: Access to Assisted
Reproductive Services and Reproductive Rights
Chapter 16: Trudo Lemmens The Commodification of Gametes: Why Prohibiting
Untrammelled Commercialization Matters
Appendix: Expert Reports
Appendix 1: Françoise Baylis The Regulation of Assisted Human Reproductive
Technologies and Related Research: A Public Health, Safety and Morality
Argument [Expert Opinion for the Federal Government]
Appendix 2: Bartha M. Knoppers & Élodie Petit Quebec: A pioneer in the
Regulation of AHR and Reserch in Canada [Expert Opinion for the Government
of Quebec]
List of Contributors
Trudo Lemmens & Andrew Flavelle Martin Introduction
Part 1: Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and
Constitutional Law and Federalism Perspectives
Chapter 1: Bernard M. Dickens An Historical Introduction to the Supreme
Court’s Decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act
Chapter 2: Ian B Lee Licensing and the AHRA Reference
Chapter 3: Hoi Kong The Federalism Implications of the Assisted Human
Reproduction Act Reference
Chapter 4: Glenn Rivard Federal and Provincial Jurisdictions with respect
to Health: Struggles amid Symbiosis
Part 2: Family Law and Children’s Rights Perspectives
Chapter 5: Carol Rogerson Determining Parentage in Cases Involving Assisted
Reproduction: An Urgent Need for Provincial Legislative Action
Chapter 6: Michelle Giroux & Cheryl Milne The Right to Know One’s Origins,
the AHRA Reference and Pratten v AGBC: A Call for Provincial Legislative
Action
Chapter 7: Vanessa Gruben A Number but No Name: Is There a Constitutional
Right to Know One’s Sperm Donor in Canadian Law?
Chapter 8: Juliet Guichon 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)
Chapter 9: Jeanne Snelling A Time for Change? The Divergent Approach of
Canada and New Zealand to Donor Conception and Donor Identification
Chapter 10: Jennifer M. Speirs What adoption law suggests about donor
anonymity policies: a UK perspective
Part 3: Commodification and commercialization of Assisted Human
Reproduction, Access and Funding of AHR, and the Role of Law
Chapter 11: Lisa C. Ikemoto Assisted Reproductive Technology Use among
Neighbors: Commercialization Concerns in Canada and the United States, in
the Global Context
Chapter 12: Susan G. Drummond Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the
Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts
Chapter 13: Stu Marvel et al Listening to LGBTQ People on Assisted Human
Reproduction: Access to Reproductive Material, Services and Facilities
Chapter 14: Colleen M Flood & Bryan Thomas, Regulatory Failure: The Case of
the Private-For-Profit IVF Sector
Chapter 15: Sarah Hudson Great Expectations: Access to Assisted
Reproductive Services and Reproductive Rights
Chapter 16: Trudo Lemmens The Commodification of Gametes: Why Prohibiting
Untrammelled Commercialization Matters
Appendix: Expert Reports
Appendix 1: Françoise Baylis The Regulation of Assisted Human Reproductive
Technologies and Related Research: A Public Health, Safety and Morality
Argument [Expert Opinion for the Federal Government]
Appendix 2: Bartha M. Knoppers & Élodie Petit Quebec: A pioneer in the
Regulation of AHR and Reserch in Canada [Expert Opinion for the Government
of Quebec]
Trudo Lemmens & Andrew Flavelle Martin Introduction
Part 1: Background to the Reference re: Assisted Human Reproduction Act and
Constitutional Law and Federalism Perspectives
Chapter 1: Bernard M. Dickens An Historical Introduction to the Supreme
Court’s Decision on the Assisted Human Reproduction Act
Chapter 2: Ian B Lee Licensing and the AHRA Reference
Chapter 3: Hoi Kong The Federalism Implications of the Assisted Human
Reproduction Act Reference
Chapter 4: Glenn Rivard Federal and Provincial Jurisdictions with respect
to Health: Struggles amid Symbiosis
Part 2: Family Law and Children’s Rights Perspectives
Chapter 5: Carol Rogerson Determining Parentage in Cases Involving Assisted
Reproduction: An Urgent Need for Provincial Legislative Action
Chapter 6: Michelle Giroux & Cheryl Milne The Right to Know One’s Origins,
the AHRA Reference and Pratten v AGBC: A Call for Provincial Legislative
Action
Chapter 7: Vanessa Gruben A Number but No Name: Is There a Constitutional
Right to Know One’s Sperm Donor in Canadian Law?
Chapter 8: Juliet Guichon 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)
Chapter 9: Jeanne Snelling A Time for Change? The Divergent Approach of
Canada and New Zealand to Donor Conception and Donor Identification
Chapter 10: Jennifer M. Speirs What adoption law suggests about donor
anonymity policies: a UK perspective
Part 3: Commodification and commercialization of Assisted Human
Reproduction, Access and Funding of AHR, and the Role of Law
Chapter 11: Lisa C. Ikemoto Assisted Reproductive Technology Use among
Neighbors: Commercialization Concerns in Canada and the United States, in
the Global Context
Chapter 12: Susan G. Drummond Fruitful Diversity: Revisiting the
Enforceability of Gestational Carriage Contracts
Chapter 13: Stu Marvel et al Listening to LGBTQ People on Assisted Human
Reproduction: Access to Reproductive Material, Services and Facilities
Chapter 14: Colleen M Flood & Bryan Thomas, Regulatory Failure: The Case of
the Private-For-Profit IVF Sector
Chapter 15: Sarah Hudson Great Expectations: Access to Assisted
Reproductive Services and Reproductive Rights
Chapter 16: Trudo Lemmens The Commodification of Gametes: Why Prohibiting
Untrammelled Commercialization Matters
Appendix: Expert Reports
Appendix 1: Françoise Baylis The Regulation of Assisted Human Reproductive
Technologies and Related Research: A Public Health, Safety and Morality
Argument [Expert Opinion for the Federal Government]
Appendix 2: Bartha M. Knoppers & Élodie Petit Quebec: A pioneer in the
Regulation of AHR and Reserch in Canada [Expert Opinion for the Government
of Quebec]