Abstract
During the past few years, Denmark has become a growing destination for single women, lesbians, and heterosexual couples wanting donated sperm. At the moment women from Sweden, Norway, Germany, Italy and the UK travel to Denmark. Simultaneously, long waiting lists on donated eggs and age restrictions are prime motivations for Danish infertile women and heterosexual couples to leave Denmark and travel to Spain or the Czech Republic for egg donation.
In this presentation we want to theorize and analyze fertility travel in or out of Denmark, in particular as far as gamete donation is concerned. Danish legislation recognizes the importance of Danish sperm as an export commodity, while eggs are legally prohibited from travelling outside of Danish borders. Theoretically, we are informed by situational analysis (Clarke) and the notion of reproductive flows (Inhorn). Our analysis centers the following questions: What happens to kinship when not only donated gametes are taken in to use, but the need of sperm and eggs encourage infertile women and men to cross borders and bend legislative restrictions to obtain them? How are nationality, ethnicity, and relatedness narrated in these transnational crossings? And how do women and men conceptualize their need to travel in order to buy gametes or the fertility treatment in question? Methodologically, we center interviews with infertile individuals and couples travelling to and from Denmark in combination with ethnographic observations carried out in Danish and Spanish fertility clinics.
In this presentation we want to theorize and analyze fertility travel in or out of Denmark, in particular as far as gamete donation is concerned. Danish legislation recognizes the importance of Danish sperm as an export commodity, while eggs are legally prohibited from travelling outside of Danish borders. Theoretically, we are informed by situational analysis (Clarke) and the notion of reproductive flows (Inhorn). Our analysis centers the following questions: What happens to kinship when not only donated gametes are taken in to use, but the need of sperm and eggs encourage infertile women and men to cross borders and bend legislative restrictions to obtain them? How are nationality, ethnicity, and relatedness narrated in these transnational crossings? And how do women and men conceptualize their need to travel in order to buy gametes or the fertility treatment in question? Methodologically, we center interviews with infertile individuals and couples travelling to and from Denmark in combination with ethnographic observations carried out in Danish and Spanish fertility clinics.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
---|---|
Publikationsdato | 14 dec. 2012 |
Status | Udgivet - 14 dec. 2012 |
Begivenhed | Selective reproductive technologies – routes of routinisation and globalisation - Københavns Universitet, København, Danmark Varighed: 13 dec. 2012 → 15 dec. 2012 |
Konference
Konference | Selective reproductive technologies – routes of routinisation and globalisation |
---|---|
Lokation | Københavns Universitet |
Land/Område | Danmark |
By | København |
Periode | 13/12/2012 → 15/12/2012 |
Emneord
- Fertility travel
- Gametes
- Europe