Deakin University
Browse

Psycho-social, ethical and legal arguments for and against the retrospective release of information about donors to donor-conceived individuals in Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2011-12-01, 00:00 authored by Sonia Allan
In the February 2011 report on its inquiry into the past and present practices of donor conception in Australia, the Australian Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs References Committee called for the introduction of legislation to regulate donor conception in all jurisdictions that do not have it in place "as a matter of priority". It further called for the establishment, "as a matter of priority", of a national register of donors to enable donor-conceived individuals to access identifying information about their donor. The Senate Committee left open the question as to whether the legislation and central register should have retrospective effect. This article focuses upon that question. It shows that arguments concerning the privacy, confidentiality and anonymity of some donors who may wish to remain anonymous are outweighed by the manifest injustice faced by donor-conceived individuals who are denied access to such information, as well as their families and donors who wish to exchange this information.

History

Location

Rozelle, N.S.W.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Lawbook Co

Journal

Journal of law and medicine

Volume

19

Pagination

354 - 376

ISSN

1320-159X

Issue

2

Publisher

Lawbook Co