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  1. Blood Is Thicker than Water: Policing Donor Insemination and the Reproduction of Whiteness.Seline Szkupinski Quiroga - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):143-161.
    On the most general level, this essay addresses the ways race is deployed in biomedical solutions to infertility. Szkupinski Quiroga begins with general assertions about fertility technology. She then explores how fertility technology reinforces biological links between parents and children and argues that most options reflect and privilege white kinship patterns and fears about race mixing. She illustrates these observations with interviews she has collected.
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  • Blood Is Thicker than Water: Policing Donor Insemination and the Reproduction of Whiteness.Seline Szkupinski Quiroga - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):143 - 161.
    On the most general level, this essay addresses the ways race is deployed in biomedical solutions to infertility. Szkupinski Quiroga begins with general assertions about fertility technology. She then explores how fertility technology reinforces biological links between parents and children and argues that most options reflect and privilege white kinship patterns and fears about race mixing. She illustrates these observations with interviews she has collected.
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  • Blood Is Thicker than Water: Policing Donor Insemination and the Reproduction of Whiteness.Seline Szkupinski Quiroga - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):143-161.
    On the most general level, this essay addresses the ways race is deployed in biomedical solutions to infertility. Szkupinski Quiroga begins with general assertions about fertility technology. She then explores how fertility technology reinforces biological links between parents and children and argues that most options reflect and privilege white kinship patterns and fears about race mixing. She illustrates these observations with interviews she has collected.
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  • A woman's choice? On women, assisted reproduction and social coercion.Thomas Søbirk Petersen - 2004 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 7 (1):81 - 90.
    This paper critically discusses an argument that is sometimes pressed into service in the ethical debate about the use of assisted reproduction. The argument runs roughly as follows: we should prevent women from using assisted reproduction techniques, because women who want to use the technology have been socially coerced into desiring children - and indeed have thereby been harmed by the patriarchal society in which they live. I call this the argument from coercion. Having clarified this argument, I conclude that (...)
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  • Mere and Partial Means: The Full Range of the Objedification of Women.Carolyn Mcleod - 2002 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 32 (sup1):219-244.
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  • Feminists on the Inalienability of Human Embryos.Carolyn McLeod & Françoise Baylis - 2006 - Hypatia 21 (1):1-14.
    The feminist literature against the commodification of embryos in human embryo research includes an argument to the effect that embryos are “intimately connected” to persons, or morally inalienable from them. We explore why embryos might be inalienable to persons and why feminists might find this view appealing. But, ultimately, as feminists, we reject this view because it is inconsistent with full respect for women's reproductive autonomy and with a feminist conception of persons as relational, embodied beings. Overall, feminists should avoid (...)
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  • “Embryo Autonomy?” What About the Autonomy of Infertility Patients? [REVIEW]Carolyn McLeod - 2005 - American Journal of Bioethics 5 (6):25 – 26.
    A review of S. M. Liao's "Rescuing human embryonic stem cell research: The blastocyst transfer method," American Journal of Bioethics 5(6), 2005: 8:16.
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  • Narrative artifice and women's agency.Aline H. Kalbian - 2005 - Bioethics 19 (2):93–111.
    The choice to pursue fertility treatments is a complex one. In this paper I explore the issues of choice, agency, and gender as they relate to assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). I argue that narrative approaches to bioethics such as those by Arthur Frank and Hilde Lindemann Nelson clarify judgments about autonomy and fertility medicine. More specifically, I propose two broad narrative categories that help capture the experience of encounters with fertility medicine: narratives of hope and narratives of resistance. This narrative (...)
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  • Multiple Gestations: Some Public Policy Issues.Patricia K. Jennings & Joan C. Callahan - 2001 - Health Care Analysis 9 (2):167-185.
    Multiple gestations, or multifetal pregnancies,raise a number of significant policy questionsconcerning the well being of women and the wellbeing of the children fetuses might become.Important questions for feminists pertain notonly to multifetal pregnancy itself, but alsoto the medical interventions associated withthese pregnancies. In this paper, we addressthe questions of how many embryos should betransferred in assisted reproduction, how manyfetuses should remain in a multiple gestation,who should make these decisions, and the needto protect women from overexposure to exogenoushormones. Although we focus (...)
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  • Ignorance is Not Bliss: The Case for Comprehensive Reproductive Counseling for Women with Chronic Kidney Disease.Ana S. Iltis, Maya Mehta & Deirdre Sawinski - 2021 - HEC Forum 35 (3):1-14.
    The bioethics literature has paid little attention to matters of informed reproductive decision-making among women of childbearing age who have chronic kidney disease (CKD), including women who are on dialysis or women who have had a kidney transplant. Women with CKD receive inconsistent and, sometimes, inadequate reproductive counseling, particularly with respect to information about pursuing pregnancy. We identify four factors that might contribute to inadequate and inconsistent reproductive counseling. We argue that women with CKD should receive comprehensive reproductive counseling, including (...)
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  • Geneticization, medicalisation and polemics.Adam Hedgecoe - 1998 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1 (3):235-243.
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  • Geneticization, medicalisation and polemics.Adam Hedgecoe - 1998 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1 (3):235-243.
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  • Which “New Eugenics”? Expanding Access to Art, Respecting Procreative Liberty, and Protecting the Moral Equality of All Persons in an Era of Neoliberal Choice.Karey Harwood - 2020 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 13 (2):148-173.
    In The New Eugenics: Selective Breeding in an Era of Reproductive Technologies, Judith Daar advocates for increased access to assisted reproductive technologies and minimizes concerns about the potential “eugenic logic” of some procreative choices. Although Daar’s goal of expanded access is laudable, her argument suggests an unresolved tension between the moral equality of persons and individual reproductive freedom. Exploring that tension, this paper argues that efforts to expand access to ART must still grapple with the “eugenic mentality” of quality control (...)
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  • Freedom and Unavoidable Judgments: A Commentary on "Nondomination and the Limits of Relational Autonomy" by Danielle M. Wenner.Karey Harwood - 2020 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 13 (2):56-59.
    In "Nondomination and the Limits of Relational Autonomy," Danielle Wenner aims to achieve the political goals of relational theorists through a more effective means. This is a worthy aspiration. She believes the neorepublican conception of freedom as nondomination "can best promote the aims embodied in the political project of feminist theorists", including reducing conditions of oppression, and do it in a way that avoids the conceptual problems inherent in relational autonomy. While I appreciate the pragmatism and clarity of her argument, (...)
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  • “The angel of the house” in the realm of ART: feminist approach to oocyte and spare embryo donation for research. [REVIEW]Anna Alichniewicz & Monika Michalowska - 2014 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 17 (1):123-129.
    The spectacular progress in assisted reproduction technology that has been witnessed for the past thirty years resulted in emerging new ethical dilemmas as well as the revision of some perennial ones. The paper aims at a feminist approach to oocyte and spare embryo donation for research. First, referring to different concepts of autonomy and informed consent, we discuss whether the decision to donate oocyte/embryo can truly be an autonomous choice of a female patient. Secondly, we argue the commonly adopted language (...)
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