Changing human reproduction : social science perspectives

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Changing human reproduction : social science perspectives

edited by Meg Stacey

Sage Publications, 1992

  • : pbk

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

Despite the extensive debates about new reproductive technologies, there is still little published research on the social and cultural implications of the new reproductive techniques. Our understanding of how babies are conceived and what it means to be a parent or relative have become more complex. The authors argue that the neglect of social research into new reproductive technologies has led to a failure to make the necessary provisions for their consequences. The plight of the involuntary childless who, having been helped to conceive, find themselves with three, four or more babies illustrates this point clearly.

Table of Contents

Introduction - Meg Stacey et al What is the Social Science Perspective? Social Dimensions of Assisted Reproduction - Meg Stacey From Private Patients to Privatization - Naomi Pfeffer Making Sense of Missed Conceptions - Sarah Franklin Anthropological Perspectives on Unexplained Infertility Having Triplets, Quads or Quins - Frances Price Who Bears the Responsibility? Gamete Donation and the Social Management of Genetic Origins - Erica Haimes The Meaning of Assisted Kinship - Marilyn Strathern Conclusion - Meg Stacey et al

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