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- Title
A retrospective study of New Zealand case law involving assisted reproduction technology and the social recognition of ‘new’ family.
- Authors
M. Legge; R. Fitzgerald; N. Frank
- Abstract
The New Zealand Human Assisted Reproductive Technology (HART) Act became law in 2004. In this article, we provide a retrospective analysis of New Zealand case law from September 1990 to March 2004, leading up to the creation of the HART Act. We examine the new understandings of parenting (developed through the routine use of ART in New Zealand) which the case law attempted to test. We examine these concepts against the previous understandings of family enshrined in the pre-existing legislation, which formed the basis for judicial rulings in the various cases to which we refer. In conclusion, we provide a brief summary of the 2004 HART legislation and draw comparisons between the old and new legislative and bureaucratic frameworks that define and support New Zealand family structure. We suggest that a change in cultural backdrop is occurring from the traditional western ideology of the nuclear family towards the traditional Maori concept of family formation, which includes a well-accepted traditional practice of guardianship and a more open and extended family structure. This ‘new’ structure reflects the contemporary lived experience of family kinship in western societies as individualized and open to choice.
- Subjects
NEW Zealand; REPRODUCTIVE technology; KINSHIP (Law); LEGISLATIVE bills
- Publication
Human Reproduction, 2007, Vol 22, Issue 1, p17
- ISSN
0268-1161
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/humrep/del361