Article info
Theoretical ethics
Paper
One mum too few: maternal status in host surrogate motherhood arrangements
- Correspondence to Dr Stuart Oultram, Department of Health Services Research, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GL, UK; stuart.oultram{at}liverpool.ac.uk
Citation
One mum too few: maternal status in host surrogate motherhood arrangements
Publication history
- Received July 12, 2012
- Revised March 27, 2014
- Accepted July 29, 2014
- First published August 19, 2014.
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Copyright information
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions
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
- 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
- Willing mothers: ectogenesis and the role of gestational motherhood