Article Text
Abstract
In a host surrogate motherhood arrangement, the surrogate agrees to be implanted with, and carry to term, an embryo created from the commissioning couple's gametes. When the surrogate child is born, it is the surrogate mother who, according to UK law, holds the legal status of mother. By contrast, the commissioning mother possesses no maternal status and she can only attain it once the surrogate agrees to the completion of the arrangement. One consequence of this is that, in the event that a host arrangement fails, the commissioning mother is left without maternal status. In this paper, I argue that this denial of maternal status misrepresents the commissioning mother's role in the host arrangement and her relationship with the surrogate child. Consequently, I suggest that commissioning mothers participating in host surrogacy arrangements ought to be granted the status of mother in the event that the arrangement fails.
- Artificial Insemination and Surrogacy
- Interests of Woman/Fetus/Father
- Children
- Family
- Ethics
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Linked Articles
- The concise argument
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Interpretations, perspectives and intentions in surrogate motherhood
- Commercial surrogacy: how provisions of monetary remuneration and powers of international law can prevent exploitation of gestational surrogates
- Altruistic surrogacy: the necessary objectification of surrogate mothers
- Ethics briefings
- The surrogacy trade: proliferating bans and an opportunistic industry raise a worrying health risk
- So not mothers: responsibility for surrogate orphans
- Narratives of neoliberalism: ‘clinical labour’ in context
- Surrogacy: beyond the commercial/altruistic distinction
- Taming the international commercial surrogacy industry
- ‘These were made-to-order babies’: Reterritorialised Kinship, Neoliberal Eugenics and Artificial Reproductive Technology in Kishwar Desai’s Origins of Love