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What is expected of 21st Century egg and sperm donors, and how does
being a donor impact on men and women's own personal lives and
relationships? How do donors navigate connections and relationships
created by donation? What do these connections mean to them, and to
the people around them -their partners, parents, siblings and
children? Donor conception is becoming increasingly widespread and
since the new millennium, we have witnessed a dramatic shift in the
way that donor conception is regulated and practiced in many
jurisdictions around the world. In the past, donor conception has
often been a family secret and donors were, almost by definition,
anonymous. Now, 'openness' is seen as the ideal and donors can
expect to be traced or contacted by those born from their
donations. But what does this shift mean for donors, and their
families? This path-breaking book draws on in-depth interviews with
donors, their kin and fertility counsellors, and addresses these
questions by analysing how understandings of donation are shaped by
the regulatory, cultural and relational contexts in which they are
formed. The authors also discuss what donation stories can tell us
about contemporary understandings of connectedness, time and
morality in the context of reproduction and family life, and
consider how reproductive 'openness' might be done differently.
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