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13 Soc. & Legal Stud. 5 (2004)

handle is hein.journals/solestu13 and id is 1 raw text is: 






            JOY TO THE WORLD!

  A (HEALTHY) CHILD IS BORN!

  RECONCEPTUALIZING 'HARM

  IN WRONGFUL CONCEPTION


                         NICOLETTE PRIAULX
                         University of Kent, UK



                              ABSTRACT

The wrongful conception action holds both a troubled past and future. As a
response to rapid technological advancement in the area of reproduction, this action
has introduced complex legal and ethical issues in the courts' efforts to respond to
the question: 'Can parenthood ever constitute an injury?' At the heart of this
dilemma lies the manner by which both law and society conceptualize 'harm' - is
this 'part of the normal vicissitudes of life' or a harmful event? But this question is
not decided within a legal vacuum and public policy factors have deeply influenced
the nature and existence of case law in this field. In the context of the controversial
cases of McFarlane v Tayside Health Board [2000] and Rees v Darlington Memorial
Hospital [2002], this article critically examines how 'harm' is judicially character-
ized and explores the various tensions emerging from conflicting harm constructs.
In arguing that the courts must seek to find a balanced approach between public
policy concerns and reproductive autonomy, this article will present a fresh theor-
etical perspective to the conceptualization of harm based on autonomy as the central
organizing principle.


                           INTRODUCTION
HE INCREASING medicalization of women's sexual and reproductive
      health remains a controversial issue in feminist scholarship. The natural
      functioning of women's bodies, menstruation, pregnancy, childbirth,
and menopause, while not experienced as 'illnesses', have nevertheless been
redefined as medical problems and subsumed within the jurisdiction of
medicine as necessitating surveillance and intervention (Nott and Morris,
2002). The growth of reproductive technology and genetic knowledge means


        SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES Copyright © 2004 SAGE Publications
    London, Thousand Oaks, CA and New Delhi, www.sagepublications.com
                       0964 6639, Vol. 13(1), 5-26
                     DOI: 10.1177/096466304040190

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