About this item

Millions of children have been born in the United States with the help of cutting-edge reproductive technologies, much to the delight of their parents. But alarmingly, scarce attention has been paid to the lax regulations that have made the U.S. a major fertility tourism destination. And without clear protections, the unique rights and needs of the children of assisted reproduction are often ignored. This book is the first to consider the voice of the child in discussions about regulating the fertility industry. The controversies are many. Donor anonymity is preventing millions of children from knowing their genetic origins. Fertility clinics are marketing genetically enhanced babies. Career women are saving their eggs for later in life. And Third World women are renting their wombs to the rich.



About the Author

Mary Ann Mason

Dr. Mary Ann Mason, J.D., Ph.D., is Professor of the Graduate School, University of California, Berkeley, and affiliate of the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology.

Dr. Mason's scholarship spans children and family law, policy, and history. Her current work focusses on issues of Children's Rights in the vastly expanding area of children and technology.
Her most recent book (co-authored with her son Tom Ekman) Babies of Technology:
Assisted Reproduction and the Rights of the Child, is the first to focus on the rights of the child in the fast growing world of assisted reproduction and genetic enhancement.

From 2000 to 2007, she served as the first woman dean of the Graduate Division at UC Berkeley, with responsibility for nearly 10,000 students in more than 100 graduate programs. During her tenure, she championed diversity in the graduate student population, promoted equity for student parents, and pioneered measures to enhance the career-life balance for all faculty. Her research findings and advocacy have been central to ground-breaking policy initiatives, including the ten-campus "UC Faculty Family Friendly Edge" (http://ucfamilyedge.berkeley.edu/toolkit.html) and the nationwide "Nine Presidents" summit on gender equity at major research universities.

Among Dr. Mason's other books are Mothers on the Fast Track: How a New Generation Can Balance Family and Careers (Oxford, 2007) , which she co-authored with her daughter Eve Mason Ekman, and two major works on child custody, From Father's Property to Children's Rights: A History of Child Custody in America (Columbia, 1994) and The Custody Wars: Why Children Are Losing the Legal Battles and What We Can Do About It (Basic, 1999) . She also co-edited (with Arlene Skolnick and Steve Sugarman) All Our Families: New Policies for A New Century (Oxford, 2000, 2003) and (with Paula Fass) An American Childhood (NYU, 2000) . Her first book on work and family conflicts, The Equality Trap, was published in 1988.

Mason was a professor in the Graduate School of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley from 1989 to 2007. She received a B.A. cum laude from Vassar College, a Ph.D. in American History from the University of Rochester, and a J.D. from the University of San Francisco. She taught American history and practiced law for several years before joining the faculty at Berkeley in 1989, where she has taught children and family law and women's issues in the law. She is considered a national expert on child custody issues and family law and policy, frequently addressing national and international media, conferences, and workshops on children and family issues.

Mary Ann Mason lives in San Francisco, California, with her husband, psychologist Paul Ekman.



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