Surrogacy needs to be regulated, not prohibited
Criticism of surrogacy—in which a woman carries a child for parents who cannot do so themselves—has become increasingly vocal and fierce in recent years. In response to the Law Commissions’ recent consultation, opponents described surrogacy as an “exploitation of women and commodification of their bodies” and a “fragmentation of motherhood.”1 In March 2023, 100 lawyers, doctors, and psychologists signed the Declaration of Casablanca demanding the universal abolition of surrogacy,2 and in 2024 the Italian prime minister proposed legislation to make it a universal crime on a par with genocide and child trafficking.3It is true that some surrogacy arrangements fail to adequately protect surrogates’ rights,4 and some intermediaries have operated unethically by trafficking women,5 engaging in unsafe practices such as multiple embryo transfer,6 or brokering surrogacy in war zones.7 However, empirical evidence does not support the claim that surrogacy is inherently harmful. Rather, it suggests that well regulated surrogacy can be…
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