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Surrogacy

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Legal regulation of surrogacy in the world:
  Legal the gainful and altruistic forms
  No legal regulation but is made
  Legal only altruistically
  Allowed between relatives up to second degree of consanguinity
  Banned
  Unregulated / uncertain situation

Surrogacy means getting pregnant and carrying a child for other persons/person who will become the child's parents\parent after their birth. Some reasons why people may look for surrogacy is if a single man wants a child, pregnancy is too much of a risk, or if a woman can't have children through their own pregnancy. The carrier of the children is called a surrogate mother.

It may or may not involve monetary arrangements between the surrogate and the biological parents. In some countries like China, Japan, Germany and France it is considered illegal. In Australia and New Zealand commercial surrogacy is an offence. India is the main destination for this as surrogacy here is cheaper.

Many people believe that surrogacy is exploitation of women; It uses women's organs as a tool for making money.[1]

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Scholars mostly say that surrogacy can lead to (or incites) social instability both for the Chinese Government and the public; That is because of civil disputes, crime, the spread of disease, and gender disproportion.[1] However, laws have not been made against surrogacy; However, the state government's attitude is to ban surrogacy.[2]

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Qi, Qing; Gu, Xiaolei; Zhao, Yangyang; Chen, Ziqin; Zhou, Jing; Chen, Song; Wang, Ling (2023). "The status of surrogacy in China". BioScience Trends. 17 (4): 302–309. doi:10.5582/bst.2022.01263.
  2. "The dangers of carrying a child for someone else in China". The Economist. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 2024-04-10.

Other websites

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