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Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?

The issue of surrogacy is gaining prominence, because of the rise of infertility in South Africa and globally. The availability of new technological innovations and improvements, shortage of children for adoption and the desire to have a child who is genetically related to the parents is prompting a...

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Main Author: Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
Other Authors: Barratt, Amanda
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Private Law 2024
Subjects:
Law
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access_status_str Open Access
author Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
author2 Barratt, Amanda
author_browse Barratt, Amanda
Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
author_facet Barratt, Amanda
Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
author_sort Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
collection Thesis
description The issue of surrogacy is gaining prominence, because of the rise of infertility in South Africa and globally. The availability of new technological innovations and improvements, shortage of children for adoption and the desire to have a child who is genetically related to the parents is prompting and increasing number of infertile couples to resort to surrogacy. One of the pertinent issues relates to the remuneration of the surrogate mother. The main purpose of this study has been to determine whether there is any need to amend the current laws on surrogacy in South Africa to include remuneration for work rendered by the surrogate mother through pregnancy and childbirth. From this understanding, this area remains relevant and needs attention. Notwithstanding the potential gains that may be made by amending the laws on remunerated surrogacy, some scholars have expressed their objections and concerns that it gives rise to challenging legal, cultural, ethical, and moral issues, including exploitation, dehumanisation, marketing of surrogate mothers, exploitation and sale of children, and psychological harm and creation of black market. However, some scholars argue that remunerated surrogacy does not amount to the sale of children or the exploitation of children because the payment to the surrogate mother is not for the transfer of the child and the rights from the surrogate mother to the commissioning parents, but rather for the services rendered by the surrogate mother and for the pain and suffering endured during pregnancy and childbirth. Since the issue of remunerated surrogacy is contentious not only in South Africa but internationally, the research examines illustrative examples from selected foreign jurisdictions with different approaches to remunerated surrogacy, such as India, Uganda and California. The main argument that the study puts forth is that surrogacy laws should be amended to accommodate remunerated surrogacy, for instances where the surrogate mother is being compensated for the services that she rendered. Remunerated surrogacy agreements must be carefully regulated to avoid the dangers of permitting wholesale commercial surrogacy, resulting in the commodification of children and the exploitation of women. Ideally, the surrogate agreement between the parties and the terms of the agreement must include the legal, financial and contractual rights that will bind the parties to the agreement. The agreements must be mutually beneficial to the parties (child, surrogate mother and commissioning parents) and couched in a way that will provide proper protection to the parties of the surrogacy agreements. The regulations must be in a way that protects the best interests of the child.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:45.686Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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publisherStr Department of Private Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40392 Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy? Musvavairi, Ruvimbo Barratt, Amanda Law The issue of surrogacy is gaining prominence, because of the rise of infertility in South Africa and globally. The availability of new technological innovations and improvements, shortage of children for adoption and the desire to have a child who is genetically related to the parents is prompting and increasing number of infertile couples to resort to surrogacy. One of the pertinent issues relates to the remuneration of the surrogate mother. The main purpose of this study has been to determine whether there is any need to amend the current laws on surrogacy in South Africa to include remuneration for work rendered by the surrogate mother through pregnancy and childbirth. From this understanding, this area remains relevant and needs attention. Notwithstanding the potential gains that may be made by amending the laws on remunerated surrogacy, some scholars have expressed their objections and concerns that it gives rise to challenging legal, cultural, ethical, and moral issues, including exploitation, dehumanisation, marketing of surrogate mothers, exploitation and sale of children, and psychological harm and creation of black market. However, some scholars argue that remunerated surrogacy does not amount to the sale of children or the exploitation of children because the payment to the surrogate mother is not for the transfer of the child and the rights from the surrogate mother to the commissioning parents, but rather for the services rendered by the surrogate mother and for the pain and suffering endured during pregnancy and childbirth. Since the issue of remunerated surrogacy is contentious not only in South Africa but internationally, the research examines illustrative examples from selected foreign jurisdictions with different approaches to remunerated surrogacy, such as India, Uganda and California. The main argument that the study puts forth is that surrogacy laws should be amended to accommodate remunerated surrogacy, for instances where the surrogate mother is being compensated for the services that she rendered. Remunerated surrogacy agreements must be carefully regulated to avoid the dangers of permitting wholesale commercial surrogacy, resulting in the commodification of children and the exploitation of women. Ideally, the surrogate agreement between the parties and the terms of the agreement must include the legal, financial and contractual rights that will bind the parties to the agreement. The agreements must be mutually beneficial to the parties (child, surrogate mother and commissioning parents) and couched in a way that will provide proper protection to the parties of the surrogacy agreements. The regulations must be in a way that protects the best interests of the child. 2024-07-05T13:03:46Z 2024-07-05T13:03:46Z 2024 2024-07-05T11:16:59Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40392 Eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Law
Musvavairi, Ruvimbo
Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
title_full Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
title_fullStr Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
title_full_unstemmed Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
title_short Surrogacy in South Africa. Is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy?
title_sort surrogacy in south africa is there a need to amend laws on remunerated surrogacy
topic Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40392
work_keys_str_mv AT musvavairiruvimbo surrogacyinsouthafricaisthereaneedtoamendlawsonremuneratedsurrogacy