The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents

From 1 April 2005, UK law was changed to allow children born through gamete donation to access identifying details of the donor. The decision to abolish donor anonymity was strongly influenced by a discourse that asserted the 'child's right-to-know' their genetic origins. Under the cu...

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Main Author: Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11715/
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author Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke
author_facet Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke
author_sort Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description From 1 April 2005, UK law was changed to allow children born through gamete donation to access identifying details of the donor. The decision to abolish donor anonymity was strongly influenced by a discourse that asserted the 'child's right-to-know' their genetic origins. Under the current regulation, if would-be parents want to receive treatment in the UK, they have no option but to use gametes/embryos from identifiable donors. For a majority, this also means that they will be on lengthy waiting lists due to the donor shortage. Interestingly, the voice of would-be parents - those who would be most affected by a contraction in donor supply and would carry the burden of informing children of their origins, should they so choose- were not heard during the donor anonymity debate or thereafter. Adopting a social constructionist approach, this thesis studies removal of donor anonymity as a social problem and examines why would-be parents remained silent during the public debate. There are two major steps taken: first, examining the donor anonymity debate in the public realm through media presentations, and secondly investigating would-be parents' reactions through ethnographic studies: a virtual ethnography study and interviews. The accounts of a sub-group of would-be parents reveal that having a donor-conceived child constitutes a permanent charge of deviance against the family. Many would-be parents were reluctant to raise their voices during the donor anonymity debate because they did not want to be exposed to publicity. Their reluctance to mobilise around pressing claims against the removal of donor anonymity reflects the variety of ways in which they can avoid the impact of this legislation. The thesis concludes by underlining the importance of having an informed public debate about the disclosure policy, and of developing mechanisms to protect both would-be parents' and of developing mechanisms to protect both would-be parents' and donor offspring's interests.
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spelling nottingham-117152025-02-28T11:15:11Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11715/ The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke From 1 April 2005, UK law was changed to allow children born through gamete donation to access identifying details of the donor. The decision to abolish donor anonymity was strongly influenced by a discourse that asserted the 'child's right-to-know' their genetic origins. Under the current regulation, if would-be parents want to receive treatment in the UK, they have no option but to use gametes/embryos from identifiable donors. For a majority, this also means that they will be on lengthy waiting lists due to the donor shortage. Interestingly, the voice of would-be parents - those who would be most affected by a contraction in donor supply and would carry the burden of informing children of their origins, should they so choose- were not heard during the donor anonymity debate or thereafter. Adopting a social constructionist approach, this thesis studies removal of donor anonymity as a social problem and examines why would-be parents remained silent during the public debate. There are two major steps taken: first, examining the donor anonymity debate in the public realm through media presentations, and secondly investigating would-be parents' reactions through ethnographic studies: a virtual ethnography study and interviews. The accounts of a sub-group of would-be parents reveal that having a donor-conceived child constitutes a permanent charge of deviance against the family. Many would-be parents were reluctant to raise their voices during the donor anonymity debate because they did not want to be exposed to publicity. Their reluctance to mobilise around pressing claims against the removal of donor anonymity reflects the variety of ways in which they can avoid the impact of this legislation. The thesis concludes by underlining the importance of having an informed public debate about the disclosure policy, and of developing mechanisms to protect both would-be parents' and of developing mechanisms to protect both would-be parents' and donor offspring's interests. 2009 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11715/1/522359.pdf Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke (2009) The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Human artificial insemination social aspects law and legislation Great Britain
spellingShingle Human artificial insemination
social aspects
law and legislation
Great Britain
Turkmendag Brunsnes, Ilke
The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title_full The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title_fullStr The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title_full_unstemmed The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title_short The removal of donor anonymity in the UK: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
title_sort removal of donor anonymity in the uk: the silencing of claims by would-be parents
topic Human artificial insemination
social aspects
law and legislation
Great Britain
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11715/