Procreation Deprived

2019 ◽  
pp. 99-112
Author(s):  
Dov Fox

When professional negligence renders sex cells unusable or reproductive capacities inoperative, shattered dreams of pregnancy and parenthood find little solicitude under American law. Our legal system fails to recognize reproductive suffering from which a plaintiff’s body and bank account emerge unscathed—because tort law usually compensates for intangible losses only if they’re closely connected to material ones. But people deprived of procreation can’t point to any bodily harm or financial setback that’s tied directly to the injury they’ve suffered. Claims almost always fail because patients don’t incur any property damage (eggs and embryos aren’t considered property) or physical intrusion (aside from whatever medical procedure they freely agreed to). Besides, courts point out, even if fertility treatment goes as planned, patients might not have been able to conceive or carry a pregnancy to term anyway—and they can still adopt. Judges who don’t dismiss these suits outright keep a tight rein on damage awards; these courts miss the centrality of procreation to aspiring parents and the magnitude of its wrongful deprivation. Still, badly behaving specialists shouldn’t be liable for the infertility that patients already suffered from, or other reproductive complications they would have anyway, no matter what quality medical care they received. Probabilistic recovery offers a principled way to compute damages for the wrongful destruction of gametes or embryos under these circumstances. The availability of adoption doesn’t negate this reproductive loss or the need for our laws to redress it. Genetic affinity assumes profound meaning in American family life and law.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-91
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

Almost a century ago editorials such as the one below expressed the fear that the American family was in serious trouble. We do not like to be doleful, but it is impossible to ignore some of the facts that have been presented with the last year or two [1882] by Dr. Goodell, Dr. Nathan Allen, and others. These facts relate to...the decadence of family life among Americans. Dr. Allen, who has been studying this subject for many years, presents the case very directly in an article entitled "The New England Family" (The New Englander). It is asserted that the objects of the institution of the family are three: the propagation of children, the preservation of chastity, mutual help and company. In each of these respects the American family, especially the New England family, shows a marked and progressive deterioration, since one hundred years ago. As regards the propagation of children, it is shown that the average native New England family is very much less productive than formerly.... The birthrate in New England families has been steadily declining until now it is lower than that of any European country except France. One additional element in this, no doubt, is the habit of delaying marriages-a habit made almost necessary by the more expensive style of living which is demanded, and by what some consider the selfishness of young men who prefer not to sacrifice their liberty to the responsibility and expense of domestic life. Another indication of family deterioration is the increase of divorces.


Author(s):  
Michael Lobban

The Anglo-American law of obligations was profoundly reshaped in the two centuries after 1800, driven by social and economic changes, and changes in legal institutions and doctrines. In contract law, nineteenth-century jurists increasingly sought to put the rules of law into a coherent rational framework (inspired by continental models resting on will theory), though they soon found that this theory could not explain many contractual doctrines. In tort law, jurists were also divided over whether unifying principles underlying tort could be uncovered, with formalist efforts to find such principles being challenged by Realists who argued that tort was in effect ‘public law in disguise’. The quest for underlying principles was also pursued by scholars of unjust enrichment, first in the United States and subsequently in England; though as in the other areas of obligations, by the end of the twentieth century, there was no consensus on whether this was possible.


2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 63-67
Author(s):  
naomi guttman ◽  
roberta l. krueger

In a cuisine known best for its ample portions of pasta and in a cold climate favoring hearty food, Utica Greens, a méélange of sautééed escarole, cherry peppers, garlic, cheese, prosciutto, breadcrumbs and olive oil, has become a regional specialty. ““Greens”” now appear on the menu of virtually every Italian-American restaurant in Utica and can be found on buffet tables at receptions and potlucks in the surrounding area. Incorporating interviews with chefs and household cooks, this article charts the history of Utica Greens from its origins as a humble dish prepared in Italian-American family kitchens to its appearance in local restaurants where it has become a nostalgic marker of a time when people grew their own food in backyard gardens and home-grown vegetables were at the center of family life.


1989 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
pp. 835
Author(s):  
Linda Gordon ◽  
Steven Mintz ◽  
Susan Kellogg

1988 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter R. Schumm ◽  
Eric E. Mccollum ◽  
Margaret A. Bugaighis ◽  
Anthony P. Jurich ◽  
Stephan R. Bollman ◽  
...  

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