Disciplined parents and autonomous children: information sharing as governing device in Swedish identity-release gamete donation
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Published:2024-01-01
Issue:1
Volume:38
Page:
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ISSN:1360-9939
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Container-title:International Journal of Law, Policy and The Family
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language:en
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Affiliation:
1. Center for Gender Research, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract
Abstract
This article analyses shifts and continuities in Swedish regulation of information sharing in identity-release donor conception. At a time when families include both solo and same-sex parenting, I draw on a practice-oriented method to compare legal and pre-legislative documents from the early 1980s with those of the late 2010s as developed in a Swedish national context. Following the turn to openness in donor conception, I discuss the practical implications of framing access to information from the hospitals’ so-called ‘special medical record’ as a children’s right, when information is in fact only available after ‘maturity’ is reached. Furthermore, I show how a significant change in the understanding of child–parent relationships in donor-conceived families is articulated in the 2019 legislation. If early policy documents portrayed donor-conceived children as potentially problematic for not ‘knowing their origin’, I argue that now it is parents in donor-conceived families who are constructed as potentially problematic. Drawing on critical kinship theory, I conclude that Swedish policy-making on information sharing in donor conception relies on a symbolic rather than material understanding of genetic relatedness that fails to acknowledge how different family forms might have different needs. Based on these findings, I suggest that policymakers take into account the implications a changing view on family life and genetics have for children and parents following donor conception.
Funder
Centre for Gender Research
Uppsala University and the Women’s Mental Health
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)