Bioethics and its Discontents
Those who study, report on, and engage in activism regarding reproductive medicine and reprogenetics can readily recite a litany of headline cases that have highlighted the nature of the individual-collective tension: Should women or couples be allowed to contract for other women to gestate and bear their biological offspring? Should couples with a hereditary disability be allowed to attempt genetic selection that might increase chances that their children will have the same disability? Should families be able to screen for embryos of a certain gender or genetic makeup? Should couples be able to travel offshore to avail themselves of services that are expensive in their own countries, or banned? Virtually every use of human biotechnologies involves not only normative ethical conundrums, but also the political question of whether, and to what degree, states have a compelling interest to regulate such choices.
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