Since the late 20th century, the production, circulation and consumption of bodily materials and reproductive services such as oocyte transfer and surrogacy have evolved into proliferating transnational reproductive economies. A wide range of new actors have emerged in this field, alongside an array of locally specific legal regulations, as well as (bio-)ethical discourses. Critical research on the political economy of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) has studied and problematized these developments. In this context, concepts such as production and reproduction, gift exchange, commercialization and labor have been adopted and re-formulated in order to grasp the specificity of reproductive economies and their correlations with capitalism. This edited volume aims to extend these critical perspectives through taking property and processes of propertization systematically into account. Focusing on property relations helps to highlight and analyze processes that constitute property objects, property subjects and property relations and their entanglement with intersecting relations of power and domination in reproductive economies.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode
1. Auflage, 2025
Bindeart: Paperback Format: 141 x 214 x 20 mm Gewicht: 462 g Umfang: 336 Seiten
e0000000000000000000000000156610Dimensions of Property in Reproductive Economieshttps://campus.de/wissenschaft/soziologie/dimensions-of-property-in-reproductive-economies/CAM51926https://campus.de/media/71/38/ba/1748271430/9783593519265.jpeg?ts=1776668782InStock40EURCAM51926e0000000000000000000000000156610Paperbackoocyte transfer, reproductive services, reproductive economies, Property, ART, Labour Property, surrogacy, assisted reproductive technologies, Open AccessStrukturwandel des EigentumsBuch1. Auflage, 2025978-3-593-51926-5{"extensions":[],"displayParent":false,"mainVariantId":"e0000000000000000000000000156610","configuratorGroupConfig":null,"displayCheapestVariant":false,"displayMainVariant":true}truetrueART, assisted reproductive technologies, Labour Property, oocyte transfer, Open Access, Property, reproductive economies, reproductive services, surrogacye0000000000000000000000000156610Dimensions of Property in Reproductive Economies4040https://campus.de/wissenschaft/soziologie/dimensions-of-property-in-reproductive-economies/CAM51926https://campus.de/media/71/38/ba/1748271430/9783593519265.jpeg?ts=1776668782InStockCAM51926e0000000000000000000000000156610Paperbackoocyte transfer, reproductive services, reproductive economies, Property, ART, Labour Property, surrogacy, assisted reproductive technologies, Open AccessStrukturwandel des EigentumsBuch1. Auflage, 2025978-3-593-51926-5{"extensions":[],"displayParent":false,"mainVariantId":"e0000000000000000000000000156610","configuratorGroupConfig":null,"displayCheapestVariant":false,"displayMainVariant":true}truetrueART, assisted reproductive technologies, Labour Property, oocyte transfer, Open Access, Property, reproductive economies, reproductive services, surrogacy/Startseite/Startseite/Wissenschaft/Startseite/Wissenschaft/Soziologie/wissenschaft/wissenschaft/soziologiee0000000000000000000000000000296e0000000000000000000000000000302e0000000000000000000000000000362e0000000000000000000000000118172e0000000000000000000000000000296e0000000000000000000000000118172e0000000000000000000000000000302CampusSince the late 20th century, the production, circulation and consumption of bodily materials and reproductive services such as oocyte transfer and surrogacy have evolved into proliferating transnational reproductive economies. A wide range of new actors have emerged in this field, alongside an array of locally specific legal regulations, as well as (bio-)ethical discourses. Critical research on the political economy of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) has studied and problematized these developments. In this context, concepts such as production and reproduction, gift exchange, commercialization and labor have been adopted and re-formulated in order to grasp the specificity of reproductive economies and their correlations with capitalism. This edited volume aims to extend these critical perspectives through taking property and processes of propertization systematically into account. Focusing on property relations helps to highlight and analyze processes that constitute property objects, property subjects and property relations and their entanglement with intersecting relations of power and domination in reproductive economies.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode40