死後生殖における社会的合意と日本的特徴についての考察及び最高裁判決への批判
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概要
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In Japan, 4 children were born by posthumous reproduction from 2001 to 2004 (1 in Shikoku, 1 in Tokyo, 1 in Osaka, and 1 in Nagano). In the case in Shikoku, the Supreme Court denied the legal child-parent relationship between the child whom the wife bore using her dead husband's frozen sperm and the deceased husband. Japan does not have a law that specifies posthumous reproduction, and the Supreme Court used this lack of existing legislation to deny the child-parent relationship. I am opposed to the judgment of the Supreme Court. Posthumous reproduction should be admitted under certain conditions. Firstly, before the man dies, he has to agree to posthumous reproduction. Secondly, the man has to freeze his sperm based on his own free will. The example of Shikoku fulfills the two conditions. About 60% of the general public approve of posthumous reproduction in Japan. However, there are many dissenting opinions among obstetricians such as the Japan Society of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Japanese society has strong views about the family, which may relate to its general approval of posthumous reproduction. It may become the pressure which has it forced that a woman bears a child. I am opposed to the pressure. However, if the pressure on a woman bearing a child is refused and she wishes to perform posthumous reproduction based on her own free will, I will respect her decision.
- 2009-10-01
論文 | ランダム
- ベトナム ハノイ・サイゴンの都市住宅 (特集 アジアの都市住宅) -- (変容する近代アジアの都市住宅)
- ベトナムの世界遺産と基礎工 (特集 世界遺産と基礎工)
- 中国における水環境の現状とその保全対策の動向 (食品関連など各種排水処理技術)
- 日本の強みを活かした水ビジネスの事業戦略を (食品関連など各種排水処理技術)
- 水質汚濁防止法に基づく排水規制の最新動向 (食品関連など各種排水処理技術)