Right To Abort in Surrogacy Contracts
Right To Abort in Surrogacy Contracts
Right To Abort in Surrogacy Contracts
Right to Abort in
Surrogacy Contracts
An Enquiry
Shamba Dey
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This articles first contention to the antiabortion clause in the draft bill is that it
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willing to add another child to her household in the first place. Alternatively, legislation or courts may allow the surrogate
to put the child up for adoption.
Conclusions
India being a favourite destination for
fertility tourism, it is important for the
legislative and judicial arm to see that,
while on the one hand, the letter of the
law changes to keep up with changing
scientific evolutions and social experiments, on the other, adequate controls
are inserted to fortify the spirit of law.
The enforceability and validity of surrogacy contracts is not under question because of its immense benefits but the implications of any legislation on anti-abortion that operates against the constitutional rights of the contracting parties
need to be reconsidered. Rules that pass
up enhanced controls might come to be
accepted considering the value-shaping
effect of law, but we must not stop
questioning whether these values are in
consonance with the more deeply-felt
and universal notions of human good
and behaviours.
Notes
1
5
6
Section 34 (23) of Draft ART Bill, 2010, Division of Reproductive Health and Nutrition, the
Indian Council of Medical Research, available
at http://icmr.nic.in/guide/ART%20REGULATION%20Draft%20Bill1.pdf
To give meaning and content to the word life
in Article 21, it has been construed as life with
human dignity.
This is derived from common law antecedents.
See, e g, Vacco vs Quill, 117 S Ct 2293, 2301
(1997).
Washington Post, 17 February 1987, at A17,
col 3; See, Akker (2005) (discussing inequalities between surrogates and contracting mothers on socio-demographic variables).
In re Baby M, 537 A.2d 1227 (NJ 1988).
Section 34(4) of ART Bill, 2010.
References
Akker, Olga (2005): A Longitudinal Pre-Pregnancy
to Post-Delivery Comparison of Genetic and
Gestational Surrogate and Intended Mothers:
Confidence and Genealogy, 26 J Psychosomatic
Obstetrics & Gynecology, 277, 281.
Gallagher (1987): Prenatal Invasions & Interventions: What's Wrong with Fetal Rights,
10 Harvard Womens Law Journal 9, 37, 57.
Kreimer (1984): Allocational Sanctions: The Problem
of Negative Rights in a Positive State, UPenn
Law Review, 132.
Radin, Margaret (1982): Property and Personhood,
34 Stanford Law Review.
Robertson, John (1994): Children of Choice: Freedom
and New Reproductive Technologies (Princeton:
Princeton University Press).
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