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Looking Like a Family: Negotiating Bio-Genetic Continuity in British Lesbian Families1 Using Licensed Donor InseminationUniversity of Southampton, UK, Caroline.Jones{at}soton.ac.uk Under current legal regulations, when undertaking donor insemination at British clinics, women are able to choose particular characteristics of donors. It is also permissible to reserve sperm from a particular donor for future use. These provisions have traditionally been associated with facilitating heterosexual couples to pass as the family. In contrast, this article discusses the significance of these practices for some lesbian couples. I explore the construction of implied (racial and cultural) bio-genetic links between donor-conceived children and co-mothers, and to co-mothers extended families. I also examine the use of the same donor for full siblings. In conclusion I discuss some of the implications for our understanding of lesbian family construction.
Key Words: bio-genetic donor insemination families kinship lesbian
Sexualities, Vol. 8, No. 2,
221-237 (2005) |
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