Surrogacy in Russia

An Ethnography of Reproductive Labour, Stratification and Migration

Christina Weis
Emerald
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Hardback
9781839828973
19 October 2021
$99.99
eBook (PDF)
9781839828966
19 October 2021
$99.99
eBook (ePub)
9781839828980
19 October 2021
$99.99

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

This timely and fascinating feminist ethnography is the first of its kind to focus on commercial surrogacy workers in Russia and from other countries of the former Soviet Union. Examining surrogacy workers' reproductive labour, and experiences of stratification and migration, the study presents innovative insights into current research on global surrogacy practices and travels for assisted reproduction. It links to wider fields of studies, such as ethnicity, feminism, women's and gender studies in the post-Soviet sphere.

Weis expertly brings together rigorous ethnographic research, feminist debates and anthropological theory to explore the attributed significance of origin, citizenship, race, ethnicity and religion, and the cultural framing and social organization of surrogacy as an economic exchange; thereby challenging and contributing to the discourse of surrogacy as a gift, a labour of love, a maternal sacrifice or work.

Tracing surrogacy workers' journeys for surrogacy work across Russia, Weis introduces geographic and geopolitical stratifications as two new lenses of stratified reproduction to analyse how surrogacy in Russia builds on and propels surrogacy workers' mobility and results in reproductive migrations.

Given the rapid global increase in the use of surrogacy and its increasingly internationalised nature, Weis's research has implications for surrogacy users, medical practitioners and regulators, as well as researchers concerned with (cross-border) surrogacy, reproductive stratifications and reproductive justice.


Shortlisted for the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness Book Prize 2022

Prologue: From Moldova to Russia for surrogacy. Gabriela's story

  • Chapter 1. Introduction: Surrogacy in Russia
  • Chapter 2. Becoming a surrogacy worker
  • Chapter 3. Making the relationship work
  • Gabriela's story continued
  • Chapter 4. Reproductive migrations
  • Chapter 5. Disruptions and reconfigurations
  • Conclusion: At crossroads
  • Appendix 1: Participants overview
  • Appendix 2: Notes on research relationships
  • Appendix 3: Emotion work
  • Appendix 4: Surrogacy workers' accommodations

Christina Weis holds a PhD in Sociology with Anthropology and is currently a Research Fellow at the Centre for Reproduction Research, De Montfort University, UK. Her research interests lie in medical anthropology, reproductive rights, social aspects of in/fertility and assisted reproductive technologies, and migration. She is particularly interested in ethnographic methods, feminist research design and the geographic region of Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia.