Friday, November 21, 2008
Elizabeth S. Scott on the Social and Political Meaning of Surrogacy Contracts
Elizabeth S. Scott (Columbia Law School) has posted Surrogacy and the Politics of Commodification on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This essay examines the changing
social and political meaning of surrogacy contracts over the twenty years since
this issue first attracted public attention in the context of the Baby M case in
the 1980s. In the protracted course of the Baby M litigation, surrogacy was
effectively framed as illegitimate commodification - baby selling and the
exploitation of women. This framing can be attributed to a moral panic generated
by the media, politicians and a coalition of interest groups opposing surrogacy
- primarily feminists and religious conservatives. The framing of surrogacy as
commodification had far reaching effects on legal regulation. In the post-Baby M
period, lawmakers in many states moved to prohibit or severely restrict
surrogacy arrangements. In recent years, however, the framing of surrogacy as
commodification has been replaced to a large extent by a more benign
characterization which emphasizes the useful service provided by surrogates to
childless couples. Further, over the past decade, regulators increasingly have
focused on the goal of reducing uncertainty and providing procedures to
efficiently establish the parental status of intended parents.
This essay
seeks to explain these changes. Several factors have been important: First,
hostility to surrogacy has declined because the moral panic has dissipated as
many of the predicted harms have not been realized. Further, advances in in
vitro fertilization (IVF) have expanded the use of gestational surrogacy, which
is less readily framed as commodification and thus, more palatable than
traditional surrogacy. Finally, the interest group dynamic has changed: Women's
groups have withdrawn, plausibly because the kinds of arguments made against
surrogacy increasingly were adopted by anti-abortion advocates. These conditions
have contributed to a political climate in which lawmakers have adopted a
pragmatic approach, regulating with a goal of minimizing the social cost of
surrogacy.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/reproductive_rights/2008/11/elizabeth-s-sco.html