Trudo Lemmens, Andrew Flavelle Martin, Cheryl Milne, Ian B. LeeThe Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Regulating Creation
The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Herausgeber: Lemmens, Trudo; Milne, Cheryl; Martin, Andrew Flavell
Trudo Lemmens, Andrew Flavelle Martin, Cheryl Milne, Ian B. LeeThe Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Regulating Creation
The Law, Ethics, and Policy of Assisted Human Reproduction
Herausgeber: Lemmens, Trudo; 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.
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
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- 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
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Trudo Lemmens is Professor and Scholl Chair in Health Law and Policy in the Faculty of Law, the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, and the Joint Centre for Bioethics at the University of Toronto. Andrew Flavelle Martin is an assistant professor in the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University. Cheryl Milne is the Executive Director of the David Asper Centre for Constitutional Rights in the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto. Ian B. Lee is an associate professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Toronto.
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]







