Mobility in North American Surrogacy: A Fertile Global Industry
By (Author) Amy Speier
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
5th February 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Gender studies, gender groups
Involuntary childlessness: advice, topics and issues
Infertility and fertilization
306.8743
Hardback
120
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
The United States is a bastion of commercial surrogacy. Intended parents from all over the globe travel to the United States seeking to build a family. However, they must navigate a complicated, convoluted industry that consists of hundreds of fertility clinics, surrogacy, and egg donor agencies, as well as new forms of business that have appeared to ease the efficiency of a long, drawn-out process.
Mobility in North American Surrogacy: A Fertile Global Industry examines the multiple players involved in global surrogacy contracts between international intended parents who opt to create a family with the help and labor of surrogates from the United States. This market remains the final frontier of commercial surrogacy, while other reproductive hubs only allow for altruistic surrogacy. The author considers the mobility and immobility experienced by intended parents, egg donors, surrogates, and professionals whose intimate labor fosters connections across economic, geographic, and social divisions. Based on four years of ethnographic research that also spans the globe, the author argues for a more nuanced consideration of the ethics of surrogacy.
Amy Speiers, Mobility in North American Surrogacy: A Fertile Global Industry, takes an inside look at peoples journeys on their paths to parenthood. With a primary focus on men who travel to North America with the hope of having a baby with a gestational surrogate, Speier lays out how shifting global fertility hubs intersect with geographic, socio-cultural, and economic mobilities for intended parents, surrogates, and fertility professionals. This fascinating account illuminates the complexities of cross-border reproductive travel and the relationships built between intended parents and surrogates. -- Diane Tober, The University of Alabama
Amy Speier is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at Arlington.