The Tale of Assisted Human Reproduction Canada: A Tragedy in Five Acts
Document Type
Working Paper
Publication Date
12-9-2019
Abstract
In the spring of 2012, Assisted Human Reproduction Canada (AHRC) — the federal agency tasked with the oversight of assisted human reproduction in Canada — was abolished through the passage of the omnibus budget bill. This ignominious end was in part a response to the Supreme Court of Canada’s Reference re Assisted Human Reproduction Act. However, as we recount in this article, it was also a result of a series of squandered opportunities to regulate assisted human reproduction in the interests of those who use or are born of assisted human reproductive technologies. This article details the genesis, life, and death of the AHRC. We conclude that many millions of public dollars and many hours of experts’ time have been spent, all for naught.
Recommended Citation
Downie, Jocelyn and Baylis, Francoise, "The Tale of Assisted Human Reproduction Canada: A Tragedy in Five Acts" (2019). Research Papers, Working Papers, Conference Papers. 61.
https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/working_papers/61