作为反亲属关系的法律:全球代孕中的殖民存在

Sonja van Wichelen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

法律和监管往往被视为治疗科学和市场弊病的灵丹妙药:监管通过制定明确的规则将风险降至最低,在不遵守这些规则时指出滥用行为,并约束行为者、机构和国家根据集体商定的原则行事。在这篇文章中,我通过观察跨境代孕安排目前如何在国际私法中辩论来挑战这种自由主义的监管叙述。我首先证明,技术与监管和法律框架密切相关。在这里,重组的知识导致了合法父母关系的新形成,同时以相当矛盾的方式模糊了其他形式的亲属关系。其次,自由主义关于法律和法规的故事侵蚀了历史和政治经济学,在这些历史和政治经济学中,法律已经将自己表现为普遍和可移动的。我研究了全球生育链的性别化、种族化和(后)殖民背景是如何在旨在保护参与国际代孕安排的人的法律文书中消失的,而不是选择新自由主义形式的亲属关系。最后,自由主义的法律故事也包含了个人主义的故事。我展示了当这种个人主义形式的法律被移植到非个人主义语境中,无论是在非西方还是西方语境中,所产生的冲突。我认为,通过将非自由主义者(跨越全球南北鸿沟)置于干预亲属本体论的生物伦理框架之下,国际私法冒着延长殖民主义和帝国主义思维逻辑的风险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Law as Anti-Kinship: The Colonial Present in Global Surrogacy
Law and regulation are often seen as the panacea for the ills of science and markets: regulation minimizes risks by setting out clear rules, calls out abuses when those rules are not obeyed, and disciplines actors, institutions, and states to behave according to collectively agreed upon principles. In this article I challenge this liberal narrative of regulation by looking at how cross-border surrogacy arrangements are currently debated in private international law. I first demonstrate that technosciences are intimately linked to regulatory and legal frameworks. Here, recombinant knowledge has led to new formations of legal parenthood while obscuring other forms of kinship in quite paradoxical ways. Second, the liberal story of law and regulation erodes the history and political economy in which law has come to represent itself as universal and moveable. I examine how a gendered, racialized, and (post)colonial context of global fertility chains is lost in the legal instruments designed to protect the people involved in international surrogacy arrangements, preferring instead neoliberal forms of kinship. Finally, the liberal story of law also embraces the story of individualism. I show the conflicts that arise when such individualist forms of law are transplanted to non-individualist contexts, both in non-Western and Western contexts. I argue that by subjecting non-liberal others (across the Global North-South divide) to bioethical frameworks that intervene in kinship ontologies, private international law runs the risk of prolonging the logic of colonial and imperial thinking.
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