Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 July 2009
Since its inception decades ago, technological intervention in human reproduction has been the subject of considerable attention and controversy. After identifying two focal points of debate, I focus in this paper upon an emerging body of literature responsive to a host of problematic issues that, scholars claim, reproductive technologies pose. Maintaining that critical assessment of this literature is necessary, I identify two areas of inquiry which deserve attention and, correspondingly, sketch directions which might guide further study.
1. ‘Reproductive technologies’ is a term that refers to a wide range of interventions which: (1) assist persons who are infertile, who have a same-sex partner, or who are without a partner, to conceive; (2) enable persons to choose the sex of their offspring; (3) promote, through prenatal diagnosis, embryo therapy, and fetal interventions (e.g., surgery), the health of children conceived; and (4) encompass research activities that advance our understanding of infertility and reproduction.
Approaches that I delineate in this paper refer to all of the above, with particular emphasis upon interventions that assist persons to conceive. Already, the interventions that facilitate conception are numerous and include, but are not limited to the following: artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization (IVF), gamete infra-fallopian transfer (GIFT), zygote intra-fallopian transfer (ZIFT), natural cycle ovum retrieval, ovum donation, and surrogacy services.
2. Professional associations have begun to formulate voluntary guidelines regarding the practice of assisted reproduction. Among the most active associations in the United States is the Ameri can Fertility Society. Refer to the following:
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