U.S. States

Individual U.S. states have passed differing laws regarding human biotechnologies, creating an often-inconsistent policy patchwork across the country. While more than a dozen states – including California – prohibit human reproductive cloning, the rest have not addressed it legislatively. Laws and regulations pertaining to assisted reproduction, especially surrogacy, also vary significantly from state to state.

 

 


Biopolitical Times

The Child-Parent Security Act, which would have legalized commercial surrogacy in New York, did not make it out of the State Assembly last week. The controversy that surrounded the bill reverberated well beyond the state, highlighting the complexities of crafting surrogacy policy grounded in social justice principles. Many of us who advocate for women’s health, reproductive justice, and LGBTQ rights will continue to grapple with how to develop equity-oriented recommendations for public policy, professional standards, and on-the-ground practices. We...

Biopolitical Times

In August 1964, the North Carolina Eugenics Board met to decide if a 20-year-old Black woman should be sterilized. Because her name was redacted from the records, we call her Bertha.

She was a single mother with one child who lived at the segregated O'Berry Center for African American adults with intellectual disabilities in Goldsboro. According to the North Carolina Eugenics Board, Bertha had an IQ of 62 and exhibited “aggressive behavior and sexual promiscuity.” She had been orphaned as...

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TALLAHASSEE — A House panel Thursday backed a bill that would prevent doctors from performing abortions that women seek because...

A laboratory scientist, in goggles, and protective gear, holds a pipette and concentrates on placing a sample of liquid into a test tube.

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DNA profile illuminated by a light.

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Landscape photo of the US Supreme Court building. with the sun and blue sky above.

CGS-authored

Historical marker in Raleigh, North Carolina H116 which states, "Eugenics Board: State action led to the sterilization by choice or coercion of over 7,600 people, 1933-1973. Met after 1939 one block E."

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A pregnant woman of color sits at a bench and table, looking down. Behind her, there is a lake and a tree trunk.

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Close up photo of a hand clock.

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A gloved hand holds several connected test tubes filled with clear liquid.

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