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How Money, Science, and Politics Drive the Commerce of Conception
Harvard University Press
February 2006
302 pages ISBN: 1591396204 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction
Despite legislation that claims to prohibit it, there is a
thriving market for babies spreading across the globe.
Fueled by rapid advances in reproductive medicine and the
desperate desires of millions of would-be parents, the
acquisition of children--whether through donated eggs,
rented wombs, or cross-border adoption--has become a
multibillion dollar industry that has left science, law,
ethics, and commerce deeply at odds. In The Baby Business,
Debora Spar argues that it is time to acknowledge the
commercial truth about reproduction and to establish a
standard that governs its transactions. In this fascinating
behind-the-scenes account, she combines pioneering research
and interviews with the industry's top reproductive
scientists and trailblazers to provide a first glimpse at
how the industry works: who the baby makers are, who makes
money, how prices are set, and what defines the clientele.
Fascinating stories illustrate the inner workings of market
segments--including stem cell research, surrogacy, egg
swapping, "designer babies," adoption, and human cloning--as
Spar explores the moral and legal challenges that industry
players must address. The first purely commercial look at an
industry that deals in humanity's most intimate issues, this
book challenges us to consider the financial promise and
ethical perils we'll face as the baby business moves
inevitably forward.
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