In the year 2022, we wIll celebrate 44 years since the birth of the first “test tube
baby”. What began as a solution for fertility problems for heterosexual couples has
now expanded to other actors: single women and men, male and female homosexual couples,
transgender people, people with disabilities, with advanced age, with genetically
transmitted diseases, among others. In turn, assisted reproduction has generated various
family models beyond the heteroparental family. This is the case of single parent
families by choice, homoparental gay families or lesboparental families. All this
variety of people who want to access reproduction requires, in many cases, the collaboration
of reproductive donors (understood as reproductive donors are sperm donors, oocyte
donors and surrogate mothers).1 The participation of third parties in family reproduction receives varied legal responses,
both in the European Union and in the American continent. From allowing or not the
donation of gametes or gestation by substitution, granting restricted access to certain
family models, different positions around anonymity, to possible contact with reproductive
donors.
The Catholic tradition (like other religions) has configured for centuries a way of
thinking the world, in various countries where its presence was notable, not only
in the religious sphere; its influence also extended to the legal field and the State,
with the purpose of intervening in broad domains of life in society. For decades,
that Catholic culture sought to dictate the morality of family arrangements, the condemnation
of certain sexualities, abortion and birth control. Consequently, it acted in the
interrelation of gender, family and kinship.
It is true that the weight of this Catholic culture has decreased in many countries,
particularly due to cultural changes in the contemporary world, as well as the pressure
exerted by the growth of neopentecostal groups in traditionally Catholic countries.
The Catholic tradition does not configure our object of reflection directly, but it
establishes the background to reflect the ways (and even the resistance) by which
the countries have verified transformations in the meanings attributed to the family,
filiation and maternity/paternity and the expansion of a reproductive bioeconomy.
What we are interested in pointing out is the different approach to all these aspects
in the Anglo-Saxon academy compared to the academic sphere of countries with a Catholic
culture. Cultural differentiation constructs very different objects of study in some
countries and in others, both due to the different legal and cultural positioning.
After 44 years, assisted reproduction poses many challenges that must be discussed
in a multidisciplinary manner. If a few decades ago the interest was focused on the
subjects who should have access to assisted reproduction techniques, the right to
know the genetic origins, whose consequence would be the disclosure of the origins
and if anonymity should be lifted, nowadays it is reflected on several issues: who
should choose the donors, the quota of children born per donor, the traceability of
samples and donors, the possible relationships of children born from donors and/or
surrogate mothers with reproductive donors and with the “own” children of the same,
which comes to be the “genetic brotherhood”.
Another important aspect to highlight is the expansion of the market for technologies
that involve access to thirdparty fertility (gametes, surrogacy) through the search
for cross-border (transnational) treatment in various situations, involving donors,
both from developed and developing countries, in north-south connections, but also
south-south. This context of expansion of technologies is articulated with the growth
of private clinics, global communication expanded by the Internet, the portability
of health plans and the expansion of women’s reproductive work, whether paid or not.
The existence of legal restrictions, in relation to some practices, has fueled the
search for treatment of people outside their countries of origin, triggering, in reproductive
recipients and donors, a series of ethical and legal questions related to filiation,
territory, nationality, identity, autonomy, which reveal the institutionalization
of gender inequalities and the stratification and exploitation of vulnerable groups.
Based on this context, the Latin American Network of Reproductive Biotechnologies
Researchers (Redlibre, by its acronym in Spanish) was created, made up of a multidisciplinary
group of researchers specialized in biotechnologies related to human reproduction.
Specifically, it is interesting how, through these technologies and the systems they
create and of which they are a part of, new social orders are being established. The
Network has extensive academic production in this field.2 Its members are specialized in different areas of knowledge (anthropology, sociology,
law, medicine, philosophy, psychology, biology) that have in common the impact of
these reproductive biotechnologies in countries with a similar legal and cultural
tradition. The sociocultural environment in which this network is located refers to
that of the countries that share a Catholic cultural tradition and a Latin legislative
framework, different from the countries with a Protestant tradition and an Anglo-Saxon
legislative framework. We consider that Latino sociocultural research has a limited
and marginal presence in theoretical and conceptual debates within Anglophone academic
spaces.
Redlibre seeks to reflect on the impact of assisted reproduction, not only on users
(suppliers of gametes and gestations, recipients and professionals of reproductive
biotechnologies), but also on the descendants generated in this way. In this sense,
the efforts of the Network aim to identify the main challenges posed by the practices
carried out and in process, by these users and the effects on offspring.
As a starting point for the Network, we applied for the II-2019 Call for Interuniversity
Research Projects together with the Ibero-American Union of Universities (UIU). This
is a strategic alliance made up of the University of São Paulo (USP), the University
of Barcelona (UB), the University of Buenos Aires (UBA), the National Autonomous University
of Mexico (UNAM) and the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM)). Our project, Social
Challenges of Medically Assisted Human Reproduction in Ibero-American Countries of
Catholic Culture Tradition,3 was selected.4
The first meeting of the group was scheduled to take place in São Paulo in March 2020,
but in view of the situation of the COVID19 pandemic, it was impossible for the researchers
to be present during 2020 and 2021. For this reason and with the same spirit, we developed
a virtual workshop where we discussed the path of assisted reproduction since its
appearance and how it has changed the way of seeing and interpreting social reproduction
in Ibero-American countries.
This publication is the result of the papers presented at the workshop “New Frontiers
in Reproductive Technologies. Questioning reproduction in the 21st century: how do
they influence countries with a Catholic tradition?”, held on June 21, 22 and 23,
2021.5 The event was attended by researchers from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Spain, France,
Italy, Mexico, Portugal and Uruguay, addressing, with great richness, the context
of assisted reproduction in these countries and its main challenges. Throughout those
days we were able to record a significant audience interested in this debate.
This issue is organized according to the following themes: markets and reproductive
flows between the two continents (Europe and Latin America); genetics, oocyte and
semen donors; gestation by substitution, families and accesses; debates in relation
to reproductive technologies: feminist and legal discourses. In sequence we have an
interview with Dr. Aurora González and two reviews.
In the first article “Transnational reproduction with third parties: the reproductive
market in Brazil”, Rosana Machin addresses the expansion of assisted reproductive
technologies, in access to third party fertility, through the evaluation of the market
situation of reproductive stem cells in Brazil. The existence of legal loopholes and
the growing demand for gametes favored an increase in the importation of genetic material
from sperm banks in the United States and from oocyte banks in Spain. The different
regulatory systems that operate in these countries promote the reproductive cell market
by reinforcing the business logic of the supply/demand power and the quality of the
genetic material of third parties. Starting from the context of global fertility chains,
the author analyzes the connections between reproductive practices in the markets
of Spain (obtaining oocytes), the United States (obtaining semen) and Brazil (recipient
of gametes).
Natacha Salomé Lima titled her article “Good wood: meanings associated with reproductive
genetics.” In it, part of the sanction of the Civil and Commercial Code in Argentina
(2015) to analyze reproductive technologies as a new source of filiation with its
own characteristics through the analysis of the meanings associated with reproductive
genetics in a subgroup of cis heterosexual women. According to the study, the way
of signifying the genetic origin is articulated with the family structure. In this
sense, the genetic component tends to relativize between the child and the bond shared
in pregnancy, lactation and childbirth. Genetic inheritance can be threatening in
the face of a future health condition and/or the obligation to register the birth.
In this context, the privileged place of the doctor in the configuration of reproductive
projects makes him a key figure.
Consuelo Álvarez Plaza and Ignacio Pichardo Galán focus on the context of sperm donors
in the article “The genetic legacy: messages from sperm donors to families and their
descendants”. Based on a virtual ethnography on the website of an international sperm
bank, the authors analyze personal messages from sperm donors addressed to potential
recipients of their genetic material, seeking to know who the messages are addressed
to, the type of message produced and with what purpose in a context in which genetics
is increasingly associated with its ability to establish links and hereditary characteristics,
the personal messages of the donors of genetic material seek to substantially motivate
the recipients, highlighting the uniqueness of their potential contribution to the
filiation project.
María Eugenia Olavarría in the article “The non-regulation of surrogacy in Mexico
between 2018 and 2021. Laicism or evangelism?” discusses the recent changes in the
practices and discourses of the actors in the regulation of surrogacy in Mexico. Addressing
the legislative initiatives presented in the last three years before the Congress
of the Union and the rulings of the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation during
2021, the author questions whether or not these modification proposals contribute
to the strengthening of the secular state and what they represent in terms of conservatism
and neomoralist discourse. This debate is developed by the author discussing the three
main features of conservatism: affirmation of the fertilized oocyte as a person, rejection
of “gender ideology” and the notion of natural family.
María Helena Oliva Augusto and Douglas Mendosa in the article “The regulation of assisted
reproductive technologies in Brazil: process and implications for expanding access”
discuss the existing legal context in Brazil in relation to assisted reproduction.
There is no specific law in the country, but ethical guidelines (resolutions) established
by a national medical council, which have undergone continuous changes since 1992,
the year of the first resolution. The objective of the article is to present how the
process of modifying these norms is related to the expansion of access to assisted
reproduction in Brazil. They discuss how the expansion of technologies shapes and
is shaped by trends in contemporary societies, such as the valorization of women’s
autonomy (empowerment) and individualism.
Ana María Rivas Rivas, Ariadna Ayala Rubio and Consuelo Álvarez Plaza in the article
“Entrepreneurship and employability in the fertility industry: the case of surrogate
mothers in California (USA)” analyze the development of a transnational care market
in assisted reproduction involving the circulation of genetic material and people
with reproductive intentions based on the existence of legislative differences between
countries and limitations in international adoption processes. In this sense, surrogacy
is treated from the perspective of women who gestate for third parties in California,
United States, as well as the development of the socalled phenomenon of “entrepreneurship”
and employability of these women. The study highlights how these women who gestate
for others consolidate themselves as important agents of these practices, being valued
by the American reproductive market. The interviews with these women show the need
to question the perspective of exploitation or the lack of agency in the process.
The article “Choosed female single parenthood in Brazil: reproductive strategies”,
by Rosana Machin, Fernanda Lye Watari and Marcia Thereza Couto analyzes single parenthood
by choice as a growing phenomenon in several countries, promoted thanks to assisted
reproductive technologies as it allows women to become mothers using genetic material
from third parties. The study investigates the reproductive strategies adopted by
observing the influence of sociopolitical and economic aspects in the decisions made.
The authors consider that these women negotiate with hegemonic social norms and values,
transgressing normative elements and modifying social norms.
Lucía Ariza in the article “The nonpathologizing foundation of the national law on
access to assisted reproduction in Argentina: the situation in the field of public
health two years after its implementation” analyzes professional attitudes regarding
the provision of reproductive treatments in the context of public health in the City
of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The study focuses on professional attitudes around the
provision of treatment for gamete donation and access to assisted reproductive technologies
for single women, same-sex couples and women of childbearing age. As a result, the
existence of a harmony between the guarantees granted by the Law and the recognition
of the rights to maternity of some social groups stands out. Despite this, there are
some ambivalences on issues such as the donation of gametes and embryos, especially
considering the economic dimension that these processes may imply.
In the article on “National and international transfers of gametes and embryos. Technical
and legal aspects”, Francisco Guijarro Ponce describes how the management, storage
and distribution of reproductive biological material has been promoted, regulated
by legal regulations and recommendations of different scientific societies, which
establish the technical conditions for the transport and documentation of patients,
clinics of origin and destination, as well as companies in charge of these tasks,
to guarantee the viability and traceability of the samples from their collection to
the destination laboratory.
The article by Marc Abraham Puig Hernández “Information provided to oocyte donors.
Some legal considerations” examines the informed consent used in cases of oocyte donors
in Spain. The author values the judicial origin of informed consent and the current
state of legislation aimed at protecting patients to assert their autonomy in medical
practice. In oocyte donation, the law in Spain establishes that part of the information
is constituted by the destination of the oocytes. Anthropological studies have shown
that it is questionable whether donors are aware of the main destination of their
gametes: the international market. The author argues about the need to comply with
the regulation by informing the fate of the gametes as a way of incorporating an element
of negotiation in the process.
Norma Blazquez Graf, Itzel Cadena Alvear and Ana Celia Chapa Romero in the article
“Feminist debates around assisted reproduction” present a review of the main feminist
debates and positions on assisted reproductive technologies. This trajectory is undertaken
from its first academic manifestations, unfolding today in a profusion of spaces for
discussion and plurality of ideas. The authors address contributions of the feminist
debate that puts life, bodies and women’s possibility of choosing at the center, by
problematizing and dimensioning the development and scope of these reproductive technologies.
They point out some axes of discussion such as the separation of sexuality and reproduction,
the tension between the genuine desire for motherhood and the imperative of compulsory
motherhood, the right to free and desired motherhood, as well as the acceptance and
access of these technologies through the development of new public policies.
Elizabeth Ormart and Constanza Curado in their article entitled “The construction
of Catholic subjectivity through the figure of the virgin-mother in the field of assisted
reproduction techniques”, discuss female subjectivity in Argentina today from two
perspectives: the legal-political plane, marked by a social dynamic that involves
debates around abortion and assisted reproduction techniques and in the religious
sphere, a discourse that is still based on the figure of the mother woman, supported
by the myth of the virgin-mother. In this sense, the article unravels the permanence
of religious representations around women present in the collective imaginary around
the feminine that circulates in the media in debates related to abortion and in reproduction
user forums assisted.
Flavia Andrea Navés, Paula Micaela Abelaira and Bianca Musante in the article “Knowledge
of adolescents from public schools in Bahía Blanca about fertility care” address the
representations and social practices of 4th adolescents from public secondary schools
of the city of Bahía Blanca, Province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, on fertility care.
The study reveals the importance of revising the contents transmitted at school to
overcome the permanence of myths and beliefs linked to sexuality and reproduction.
In the article “Evolution of assisted reproduction technologies. A view from biomedicine”,
Javier Flores López describes the characteristics of the advances arising from scientific
and technological research in this century, in particular transplants, artificial
organs and the production of sexual cells in the laboratory and examines the collateral
effects of these techniques, as well as the debates around them on the present and
future of human reproduction.
Closing the articles of the dossier, is the interview conducted by Consuelo Álvarez
Plaza and Ignacio Pichardo Galán with Dr. Aurora González Echevarría, professor of
social anthropology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona, a recognized expert
in kinship theories.
The monograph also has two reviews, in relation to recently published books on the
subject of assisted reproduction in Ibero-American countries. Javier Flores López
presents the review of the book Ethnography of reproductive markets: actors, institutions and legislation, by Ana María Rivas Rivas and Consuelo Álvarez Plaza (eds.). And Consuelo Álvarez
Plaza presents a review of The production of kinship. An interdisciplinary perspective on oocyte and sperm donation, by Ludmila Jurkowski, Natacha Salomé Lima and Mariela Rossi (coords.).
We invite readers to follow this challenging debate, based on the contribution of
each of the articles. We hope that our work will be a small contribution to this collective
task of fighting for reproductive justice, as a part of social justice.