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Books > Law > Jurisprudence & general issues > Legal profession
Reproductive science continues to revolutionise reproduction and
propel us further into uncharted territories. The revolution
signalled by the birth of Louise Brown after IVF in 1978, prompted
governments across Europe and beyond into regulatory action. Forty
years on, there are now dramatic and controversial developments in
new reproductive technologies. Technologies such as uterus
transplantation that may enable unisex gestation and babies
gestated by dad; or artificial wombs that will completely divorce
reproduction from the human body and allow babies to be gestated by
machines, usher in a different set of legal, ethical and social
questions to those that arose from IVF. This book revisits the
regulation of assisted reproduction and advances the debate on from
the now much-discussed issues that arose from IVF, offering a
critical analysis of the regulatory challenges raised by new
reproductive technologies on the horizon.
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