Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.
Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.
Reproductive Tourism
Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form
Also in Reproductive Justice and Gender
How Do We Get Students Interested in Science? Inspire Them
PZ Myers Pharyngula
The Pentagon's Shameful Record On Rape
Christy Hardin Smith Firedoglake
Stripper School: 6 Feminist Lessons Learned on the Stage
Feministe
I'm certainly sympathetic to the plight of couples who can't conceive for whatever reason. And it certainly makes sense for women to voluntarily carry someone else's pregnancy if it means making a lot of money. But I think it's possible to be skeptical of this situation without passing judgment on the people involved in it, most of whom are doing the best that they can in tough circumstances.
An article published in The Times of India in February questioned how such a law would be enforced: "In a country crippled by abject poverty," it asked, "how will the government body guarantee that women will not agree to surrogacy just to be able to eat two square meals a day?"
One could argue that surrogates are simply providing a service like any other. But I'm not sure that we want to turn reproduction into a service industry. The inequalities here are so stark -- and the carrot of thousands of dollars so tempting for women in a country with astounding poverty rates -- that writing if off as purely business is inadequate.
"Surrogates do it to give their children a better education, to buy a home, to start up a small business, a shop," Dr. Kadam said. "This is as much money as they could earn in maybe three years. I really don't think that this is exploiting the women. I feel it is two people who are helping out each other."
Mr. Gher agreed. "You cannot ignore the discrepancies between Indian poverty and Western wealth," he said. "We try our best not to abuse this power. Part of our choice to come here was the idea that there was an opportunity to help someone in India."
In the Mumbai clinic, it is clear that an exchange between rich and poor is under way. On some contracts, the thumbprint of an illiterate surrogate stands out against the clients' signatures.
Thoughts?
Tagged as: women, surrogate mothers, pregnancy, india, middle east
Jill Filipovic is a New York-based freelance writer and a law student at NYU. More of her writing is available online at her blog, Feministe.
| Also in Reproductive Justice and Gender | |||
| How Do We Get Students Interested in Science? Inspire Them We need to start motivating students (and motivating women) to pursue science careers. Here's how we do it. Post by PZ Myers. August 6, 2008. |
The Pentagon's Shameful Record On Rape "Women serving in the U.S. military are more likely to be raped by a fellow soldier than killed by enemy fire in Iraq." Post by Christy Hardin Smith. August 6, 2008. |
Stripper School: 6 Feminist Lessons Learned on the Stage A woman who stripped in Vegas writes about what working in a strip-club taught her about feminism in the work place. Post by . August 5, 2008. |
|