Written by two medical and legal pioneers in the field, this book comprehensively reviews and analyses the evolving law and policy issues surrounding assisted reproductive technologies. Dr. Howard W. Jones, Jr., founder of the first in vitro fertilisation program in the United States, offers medical commentary while attorney Susan L. Crockin, author of the column ''Legally Speaking'' in ASRM News (American Society for Reproductive Medicine) provides legal analysis. The book opens with a legal primer and timelines sketching the medical and legal touchstones in the history of reproductive technology and law. Each chapter provides a casebycase discussion of the relevant law, as well as cogent medical and legal commentary and analysis on a particular substantive area. Chapter topics deal with a vast array of issues, including artificial insemination, sperm and egg donation, traditional and gestational surrogacy, posthumous reproduction, samesex parentage, genetics, cryopreservation and embryo litigation, discrimination and access to reproductive care, professional liability, stem cell research, and abortion. In discussing the medical and legal arguments surrounding these issues, Crockin and Jones reveal what has gone right and what at times has gone terribly wrong for both the families and the professionals involved. They make clear that technological advancements have far outpaced the laws and policies in place to protect all who use them. This book makes a timely contribution to current debates over the legal and policy issues raised by the recent birth of octuplets in California and the embryo legislation activity taking place in many states.It offers information and insight to policymakers, medical and legal professionals, patients and other participants, and everyone else interested in the history and future direction of the field.''The book is encyclopedic in its review of events that have shaped ART over the past three decades. No other publication has undertaken to compile such a review of relevant events, cases, law, and policies.'' -- Judith F. Daar, author of Reproductive Technologies and the Law''In a field crowded with hyperbole and fear, Legal Conceptions provides a haven for anyone seeking thoughtful analysis and wise counsel. The authors, both experts in the field of assisted reproduction since its earliest days, show how expanding technologies have created ethical problems -- and how the law can begin to resolve them.'' -- Debora Spar, President, Barnard College