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Fair Trade as an Instrument for the Regulation of Risks in the Cross-Border Surrogacy Market

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Sharon Bassan*
Affiliation:
University of Haifa, The Center of Gender, Law and Policy, bassansh@post.tau.ac.il.

Abstract

Cross-border surrogacy transactions [CBST] entail several risks for the participants and the resulting child and, consequentially, for their states. In the absence of clear standards or coherent legal rules, the global industry depends on private contracts, the result of negotiations between parties from different countries with unequal bargaining power, which distributes risks and benefits unfairly. In this article I suggest a Fair Trade model as an instrument for the regulation of these transactions.

The Fair Trade model addresses market failures and the externalization of risks. The basic principles of Fair Trade include trading process according to proper standards of quality and ethics based on a certification mechanism, a minimum price to producers, direct purchasing, transparent rules and fair distribution. In addition to quality and ethics, Fair Trade is a developmental tool, ensuring more of the economic benefits to producers in the global south.

Applying these elements on the cross-border surrogacy market can be fruitful for the regulation of risks entailed in CBST. Certification of surrogacy services can ensure proper medical standards and fundamental rights, and decrease health risks; direct purchasing through democratically elected surrogates’ co-operatives could improve the surrogates’ power of negotiation and decrease contractual risks; a minimum price could guarantee a greater income to surrogates, and social premium could be used to fund communal projects and help surrogates to improve their social position. Finally, transparency can address administrative risks and ensure that children’s rights are not violated.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016

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46- International Surrogacy Arrangements (n 32) 352-53.

47- Spanish Supreme Court decision 835/2013, Feb. 6, 2014.

48- Hague Conference on Private International Law, The Parentage/Surrogacy Project, cit., Annex I, par. 3. Moreover, on Dec. 11, 2014, the Spanish Minister of Justice announced that an amendment was planned to the draft Spanish Law on Civil Registries with the view of ensuring compliance with the ECtHR jurisprudence.

49- Recent jurisprudence of the ECfHR (n 41) 8.

50- ‘IVF Centres Direct Foreigners to Consulates over Surrogacy Issue’ (Hindustantimes, July 15, 2010) <www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/Mumbai/IVF-centres-direct-foreigners-to-consulates-over-surrogacy-issue/Article1-572534.aspx>

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53- International Trade Centre, ‘Market Access, Transparency And Fairness In Global Trade: Export Impact For Good’ 6 (2010) [hereinafter: Market Access, Transparency and Fairness].

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55- Ibid 5-6.

56- Ibid 6.

57- Ibid 34.

58- Ibid 35.

59- Ibid 37-38.

60- Stiglitz, Joseph E. & Charlton, Andrew, Fair Trade For All - How Trade Can Promote Development 52 (New York 2005)Google Scholar.

61- Market Access, Transparency and Fairness (n 53) 78.

62- Stiglitz & Charlton (n 60) 117.

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66- Ibid 128.

67- For human rights implications of cross-border surrogacy transactions, see Bassan (n 18).

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77- See, e.g., ‘The Center for Policy Analysis on Trade and Health’ <http://www.cpath.org> (publishing a list on globalization and health, and posting brief descriptions and contact information for additional key organizations attempting to address the public health effects of global trade).

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80- ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work and its Follow-up, Adopted by the International Labor Conference at its Eighty-sixth Session, Geneva, 18 June 1998 (Annex revised June 15, 2010), http://www.ilo.org/declaration/thedeclaration/textdeclaration/lang--en/index.htm.

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82- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 6-7.

83- Social Research (n 2) 52.

84- Saravanan (n 12) 8 (reporting that some surrogates were happy to stay in the surrogate home and escape daily household chores or domestic problems); Sama (n 9) 39, 123.

85- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 30.

86- Ibid 41.

87- Ibid 42.

88- Ibid 6.

89- Ibid 48.

90- Ibid 205 & tl. 9.2.

91- International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, § 2(1), 993 U.N.T.S. 3 (1966); S. Exec. Doc. D, 95-2 (1978); S. Treaty Doc. No. 95-19, 6 I.L.M. 360 (1967).

92- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 46.

93- Regarding the self-interest of developed countries in the regulation of the medical services market, see Cohen, Glenn I., ‘How to Regulate Medical Tourism (and why it Matters for Bioethics)’ [2012] 12 Dev. World Bioethics 9, 13CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cohen (n 71) 16.

94- For the UK, see, e.g., Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 244.

95- Carey, C. & Guttenstein, E., ‘Governmental Use of Voluntary Standards: Innovation in Sustainable Governance’ (for ISEAL & Trade Standards Practitioners Network 2008)Google Scholar.

96- Renard, Marie-Christine, ‘Quality Certification, Regulation and Power in Fair Trade’ [2005] 21 J. Rural Stud. 419, 423CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

97- Ibid 421.

98- Permanent|Bureau, ‘A Preliminary Report on the Issues Arising from International Surrogacy Arrangements’ [2012] <http://www.hcch.net/upload/wop/gap2012pd10en.pdf> 22, n. 63+22,+n.+63>Google Scholar.

99- E.g. Mexico, international Surrogacy Arrangements (n 32) 271, Holland, Ibid 287.

100- India, international Surrogacy Arrangements (n 32) 193; international Surrogacy Arrangements (n 32) 439, 446.

101- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 204.

102- Ibid 205.

103- Ibid 35.

104- Ibid 48.

105- Ibid 211.

106- Ibid 213.

107- E.g. Lyon, , ‘Evaluation of the Actual and Potential Benefits for the Alleviation of Poverty through the Participation in Fair Trade Coffee Networks: Guatemalan Case Study’ (2002) <www.colostate.edu/Depts/Sociology/FairTradeResearchGroup> (showing that the higher FT price allowed the majority of cooperative members to pay workers to harvest their crops, freeing their children to attend school)+(showing+that+the+higher+FT+price+allowed+the+majority+of+cooperative+members+to+pay+workers+to+harvest+their+crops,+freeing+their+children+to+attend+school)>Google Scholar.

108- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 33. For success rates, see ibid 5, 29.

109- From an interview with Carol Wills, ‘Executive Director of the International Federation of Alternative Trade (IFAT)’ in Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 8.

110- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 211-12. For studies, see e.g. Taylor, P., ‘Poverty Alleviation Through Participation in Fair Trade Coffee Networks: Synthesis of Case Study Research Questions and Findings’ (2002) <www.colostate.edu/Depts/Sociology/Fair-TradeResearchGroup> (showing how groups shared commercial opportunities and exchanged contacts and information)+(showing+how+groups+shared+commercial+opportunities+and+exchanged+contacts+and+information)>Google Scholar; Lyon (n 107) (showing how assemblies helped the town government to organize a rubbish collection program).

111- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 48-49.

112- Ibid 31.

113- For critiques regarding the costs of compliance, potential anticompetitive behavior of strong actors, certification costs etc., see Market Access, Transparency and Fairness (n 53) 7.

114- Young, Iris Marion, ‘Responsibility and Global Justice: A Social Connection Model’ [2006] 23 Soc. Phil. & Pol’y 102, 127Google Scholar.

115- Renard (n 96) 423 (arguing that consumers will be willing to pay more for if they are guaranteed that ethical manufacturing is in order or a price premium will actually reach producers).

116- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 201.

117- ‘Pundekaut Achrait’ [Responsible Surrogacy] <http://www.r-surrogacy.org/> (accessed July 20, 2014). A website that discusses which ethical problems may make the contract making undesirable for surrogates, and raises consciousness of, as well as market pressure on, potential consumers.

118- Nicholls & Opal (n 54) 201. On the importance of measurable impact see ibid 251.