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Who

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Who s the daddy? Genetics and parental identity HI269 Week 4 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Who


1
Whos the daddy? Genetics and parental identity
  • HI269
  • Week 4

2
Whos the daddy? Family identities in perspective
  • I. Defining the family shaping the history of
    kinship
  • A. In law
  • B. In culture
  • C. In nature?
  • II. Family and technology in the genetic age
  • A. pater semper certas est?
  • B. DNA is thicker than water?
  • C. Old kinship for new families?

3
Defining Family
  • In Law
  • (Social) Paternity is basis for inheritance
  • Traditionally, paternity determined by marriage
  • Traditionally, maternity determined by
    gestation/birth
  • Legal code privileges culturally-rooted norms of
    family (normative family and in the interests
    of the child)
  • Changes post genetics/NRTs
  • Increasing focus on biological paternity and
    rights to be associated with it
  • Inconsistencies in law which privilege social
    over biological fathers (eg their rights in cases
    of AID) being removed
  • fact of birth now must be reassessed
  • In Culture
  • (Social) Paternity basis for many forms of social
    status
  • Blood is thicker than water
  • Structural and cultural preference for specific
    family structures eg, in West, a blood-based
    kinship, nuclear, heterosexual, with at least one
    breadwinner
  • Changes post genetics/NRTs
  • Use of genetic testing to confirm/affirm
    parentage -gt diminished focus on social
    parenting?
  • Availability of biological kinship to populations
    previously excluded from this privileged social
    form?

4
Family in nature?
  • There is of course the distinction dictated by
    nature between a bastard and his mother and a
    bastard and his father and this distinction has
    both an evidential and a familial aspect. Nature
    permits that a man may produce more bastards more
    secretly. Facts dictate that it must be far more
    difficult to establish the paternity of a bastard
    than his maternity blood tests can sometimes
    deny an alleged paternity but at present cannot
    to any significant extent establish it the facts
    of birth normally establish maternity.
  • Report of the Committee on the Law of Succession
    in Relation to Illegitimate Persons (Russell
    Report), 1966.

5
Status of the human embryo in nature? Law?
A human embryo cannot be thought of as a person,
or even a potential person. It is simply a
collection of cells which, unless it implants in
a human uterine environment, has no potential for
development. OR the embryo of the human
species must be afforded some protection in
law Warnock Report, 1985
6
NRTs and the Law UK timeline
  • 1930s AID comes into common (but unpublicised)
    use in US/UK
  • 1943-5 publication on frequency of AID cases in
    BMJ produces popular AND medical outrage, calls
    for bans in Parliament, Church
  • 1958 Divorce case alleged use of AID w/o
    husbands permission as grounds for divorce on
    basis of adultery
  • 1959 Feversham Committee established to determine
    bastardy of AID children
  • 1966 Report of the Committee on the Law of
    Succession in Relation to Illegitimate Persons
    (Russell Report)
  • 1975 Adopted children gain right to see original
    birth cert at age 18.
  • 1982 Warnock Committee formed to debate ethnics
    of assisted reproduction and rights of genetic
    parents over children produced by them (for other
    non-biological families)
  • 1985 Warnock Report published recommending strict
    regulation
  • 1990 Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act
    established HFEA limited time limits in Abortion
    Act to 24 weeks Established that Surrogacy
    arrangements not legally enforceable. Only
    regulates donated gametes, so DOES NOT regulate
    GIFT or IUI from partners gametes.
  • 2001 Human Reproductive Cloning Act Prohibition
    of human cloning
  • 2004 Amendment of the HFEA Act to remove the
    right of new donors to be anonymous once the
    child has become 18. Donors are still protected
    from legal claims for economic support/parental
    responsibility.
  • 2006 European Tissue Directive comes into effect
    as UK law, regulating gametes as well as other
    tissues
  • April 2007 UK bans sale/provision of fresh
    (therefore previously unregulated) sperm over the
    internet

7
Pater semper certas est?
Thomas Beatie, a married man who used to be a
woman, is pregnant with a baby girl TimesOnline
March 26, 2008
Junior, Universal Pictures, 1994
8
male pregnancy a case study
  • "I have a very stable male gender identity. I see
    pregnancy as a process, and it doesn't define who
    I am. It's not a male or female desire to want to
    have a childit's a human desire I'm a person,
    and I have the right to have my own biological
    child."
  • "We've had a really hard time finding doctors to
    treat us and to help us get pregnant We got
    rejected by our first doctor because he said that
    his staff felt uncomfortable working with someone
    like me."
  • "Unfortunately, they don't make man-ternity
    clothes, so I'm kind of stuck. I have no idea
    what I'm going to wear in the future when I get
    bigger."
  • Thomas Beatie, Oprah Winfrey Show, 04/03/2008

9
The icky factor?
  • the pregnant man would become a father. Or
    rather, a mother. And here's the thing. We find
    this unpalatable, but not because of the dangers
    involved, the strange technology, the
    cutting-edge operations. It's because it changes
    something fundamental about the way we see the
    world. Or rather, about the way we feel. Thinking
    about a pregnant man is difficult on an emotional
    level, because our emotions are formed, according
    to evolutionary biologists, by one crucial
    factor. And that's whether we have the brain
    chemistry of, on the one hand, a sperm shooter,
    or, on the other, an egg protector. These are the
    two halves of our emotional world. Even if you're
    gay, say the evolutionary biologists, you're
    either a sperm-shooter or an egg-protector at
    heart.
  • William Leith Pregnant Men Seven Magazine,
    Sunday Telegraph, 10/04/2008

10
But will it sell? Commercialising the fatherhood
experience or selling celibacy?
The Empathy Belly
11
So is DNA is thicker than water?
12
Advantages and disadvantages of forms of sperm
donation
Regulated gamete donation ManNotIncluded and sim. Known donor insemination Sex with a stranger
Fresh sperm No Yes Yes Yes
Anonymity convenience No No Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Safety Legal protection Yes Yes Uncertain No Yes No No No
cost No No Yes Yes
Legal protection for donor Yes No No No
Science and Technology Parliamentary Subcommittee
Report on Human Reproductive Technologies and the
Law, 2004
13
Old kinship for new families?Or old families
for new genetic kin?
14
OR does egg donor sperm from dad A sperm
from dad B plus test tube gestational mother
adoption and immigration lawyers

The new ideal nuclear family?
15
New options for non-traditional families?
  • Do the NRTs allow people to form families more
    flexibly, or in novel formats?
  • Or do they simply allow new groups to reproduce
    the culturally preferred nuclear family norm?
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