A Child's Right to Identity in the Context of Embryo Donation: Part 1

Nicole Bouah, Carmel Jacobs
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Abstract

This article investigates the extent to which the South African Legislature and the international community recognise the right to identity of a child born through embryo donation. A distinction is drawn between embryo donation, gamete donation and surrogacy. Thereafter, the article discusses the multiple aspects which the right to identity comprises, namely: personal, biological, family and siblingship identity. An assessment is made of how these various aspects are impacted by national and cross-border embryo donation arrangements. The Children's Act 38 of 2005, the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, the National Health Act 61 of 2003 and the Regulations Relating to Artificial Fertilisation of Persons, in addition to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACRWC) are critically examined to the extent that may be applicable to children born through embryo donation. The article concludes that neither the South African legislative framework, nor the CRC or the ACRWC explicitly upholds the child's right to identity
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胚胎捐献背景下儿童的身份权:第一部分
本文调查了南非立法机构和国际社会在多大程度上承认通过胚胎捐赠出生的儿童的身份权。文章对胚胎捐赠、配子捐赠和代孕进行了区分。随后,文章讨论了身份权所包含的多个方面,即:个人身份、生物身份、家庭身份和兄弟姐妹身份。文章评估了国内和跨境胚胎捐献安排对这些不同方面的影响。除《儿童权利公约》(CRC)和《非洲儿童权利与福利宪章》(ACRWC)外,还对《2005 年第 38 号儿童法案》、《1996 年南非共和国宪法》、《2003 年第 61 号国家卫生法案》和《人工受精相关条例》进行了严格审查,以确定其在多大程度上适用于通过胚胎捐赠出生的儿童。文章的结论是,无论是南非的立法框架,还是《儿童权利公约》或《非洲儿童权利与福利宪章》,都没有明确维护儿童的身份权。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
67
审稿时长
24 weeks
期刊介绍: PELJ/PER publishes contributions relevant to development in the South African constitutional state. This means that most contributions will concern some aspect of constitutionalism or legal development. The fact that the South African constitutional state is the focus, does not limit the content of PELJ/PER to the South African legal system, since development law and constitutionalism are excellent themes for comparative work. Contributions on any aspect or discipline of the law from any part of the world are thus welcomed.
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