This monograph examines the Iranian and Shia legal debates on technologies of assisted reproduction (including embryo donation and surrogacy) and looks at the regulations and implementation of these technologies in Iran. In particular, it addresses: 1) an analysis of the moral reasoning embedded in the Shia theological legal discourse on reproductive technology and how this tradition interprets assisted reproduction with a particular focus on underlying concepts, structure and principles of kinship; 2) the emergence and development of the relevant legislation, regulations and administrative policies and how this might shape the relationship between civil and religious law in Iran, and 3) the ways in which reproductive technology is used and understood with particular focus on underlying values, local narratives and the resulting societal dynamics. The methodological approach for this research is a combination of extensive ethnography and textual analysis of important academic and religious seminary publications in Iran, from Shia jurisprudence (fiqh) and Persian histories to the analysis of laws and verdicts.
The Killing Fields of East New York : The First Subprime Mortgage Scandal, a White-Collar Crime Spree, and the Collapse of an American Neighborhood
Stacy Horn
audiobookPolitical Anthropology
Fouad Sabry
bookOrigins of Pictures : Anthropological Discourses in Image Science
bookI Am Cyprus
Annetta Benzar
bookWhen Battered Women Kill
Angela Browne
bookScarlet A
Katie Watson
audiobookIn Harm’s Way : The memoir of a child protection lawyer from the most secretive court in England and Wales – the Family Court
Teresa Thornhill
audiobookFrom Jerusalem to a Kingdom by the Sea
Adel A. Dajani
bookSecrets of Cancer Survivors
Elizabeth Gould
audiobookThe Loneliness Files
Athena Dixon
audiobookDen Talande Tystnaden
Kjell Palmberg
bookThe Little Book of Anthropology
Rasha Barrage
audiobook