Academic literature on the topic 'Posthumous child'

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Journal articles on the topic "Posthumous child"

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DICKINSON, Narelle, and Jennifer GAFFNEY. "Implications of Posthumous Care — The Experience of the Surviving Partner." Fertility & Reproduction 04, no. 03n04 (2022): 93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s266131822274005x.

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Background: Posthumous assisted conception remains controversial, and in providing this form of care, it is critical that fertility clinics consider the potential effects on the welfare of the person to be born, as well as any existing children already within the family unit. The NHMRC provides clear clinical guidelines for the collection, storage and use of gametes or embryos posthumously, however care providers rarely have an opportunity to gain a genuine understanding of the experience for a bereaved spouse undertaking this form of treatment. Aim: To explore the social and psychological imp
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Шелютто, Марина, and Marina SHyelyutto. "POSTHUMOUSLY CONCEIVED CHILDREN: DETERMINATION OF PARENTAGE AND INHERITANCE RIGHTS." Journal of Foreign Legislation and Comparative Law 2, no. 4 (2016): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/21253.

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The possibility to store sperm and to produce embryos in vitro has made it possible for a child to be conceived after the death of one or even both of the child’s parents and the number of posthumous conceptions has increased in recent decades around the world. Posthumous reproduction raises a complex of legal issues: has someone the right to harvest sperm from a dead man body and to use cryopreserved sperm, embryos or eggs to conceive a child after the death of his (her) genetic parent, can posthumously conceived child have legal tie with such a parent and inherit from his (her) parent? These
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Peart, Nicola. "Life beyond Death: Regulating Posthumous Reproduction in New Zealand." Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 46, no. 3 (2015): 725. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v46i3.4905.

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This article argues that the current legal regulation of posthumous reproduction in New Zealand is deficient. Posthumous reproduction raises issues in relation to consent, the welfare and status of the child, and even such practical issues as succession rights and estate administration. Drawing on Australian and English case law and legislation, this article proposes reform of the current legal regulation to clarify the consent requirements for collection and use of gametes after the death of the gamete provider, and to address the legal status and associated rights of posthumously conceived c
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LAWSON, Angela. "Blurring the Lines Between Life and Death — Ethical and Psychological Considerations in Posthumous Conception." Fertility & Reproduction 04, no. 03n04 (2022): 109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2661318222740218.

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ART practitioners routinely offer embryo and oocyte/sperm cryopreservation services to patients and couples who are interested in future family building. Unfortunately, some patients, whether due to disease or accident, die after cryopreserving their genetic material. In the event of a patient’s death, their partner or other family members may desire to use those materials to achieve pregnancy. However, posthumous reproduction (reproductive attempts after the death of a partner) has resulted in a number of ethical issues regarding pre-death consent from the deceased patient and ambiguous legal
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Ahluwalia, Usha, and Mala Arora. "Posthumous Reproduction and Its Legal Perspective." International Journal of Infertility & Fetal Medicine 2, no. 1 (2011): 9–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10016-1010.

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ABSTRACT Assisted reproductive techniques allow us to use donated and cryopreserved gametes posthumously. This can pose legal issues, such as legitimacy of the child born, inheritance rights of the child, and life long psychosocial implications. The law in different countries takes a varied stand on it. Posthumous use of gametes must abide by the law of the land. A valid consent of the deceased is required. Mourning period of at least one year should be allowed prior to embarking on ART procedures on the surviving partner. The law regarding legitimacy of the child born after death or divorce o
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Amaral, Nabas Henrique Benvindo do, and Francislaine de Almeida Coimbra Strasser. "FERTILIZAÇÃO IN VITRO POST MORTEM E SEUS REFLEXOS NO DIREITO SUCESSÓRIO." Colloquium Socialis 8, no. 1 (2024): 1–13. https://doi.org/10.5747/cs.2024.v8.s180.

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The present work aims to present posthumous in vitro fertilization, its specificities, and its effects on inheritance law. It seeks to address the aspects inherent to its characteristics and its influence by family law, focusing on the principle of saisine and the constitutional right to inheritance. Initially, a brief explanation and conceptualization of inheritance law, the right to inheritance, inheritance as a fundamental right, necessary and testamentary heirs, and succession were provided. Subsequently, an examination of filiation in Brazilian legal order was conducted, comparing natural
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Gilbar, Roy, and Efrat Ram-Tiktin. "It Takes a Village to Raise a Child: Solidarity in the Courts—Judicial Justification for Posthumous Use of Sperm by Bereaved Parents." Medical Law Review 28, no. 2 (2019): 317–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwz033.

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Abstract The practice of posthumous use of sperm raises social, ethical, and legal questions. We examine the issue of who should be allowed to use the sperm—only the deceased’s spouse or the deceased’s parents as well—from the perspective of solidarity and relational autonomy. Following a theoretical discussion of various accounts of solidarity and relational autonomy, the legal status of posthumous assisted reproduction is examined in three jurisdictions—the USA, Australia, and Israel—in which most applications to the courts were submitted by the deceased’s parents. In Israel, we found fiftee
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Bokek-Cohen, Ya’arit, and Vardit Ravitsky. "Soldiers’ Preferences Regarding Sperm Preservation, Posthumous Reproduction, and Attributes of a Potential “Posthumous Mother”." OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying 79, no. 2 (2017): 132–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0030222817725179.

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We present study results regarding soldiers’ willingness to conduct posthumous reproduction. Two hundred twelve Israeli soldiers filled in a questionnaire designed to examine their willingness to cryopreserve sperm and evaluate in which familial circumstances they would consent to posthumous reproduction. They ranked the desirability of 46 attributes of a potential mother and a life partner. Findings indicate a relatively high predisposition in favor of posthumous-assisted reproduction; the wishes of soldiers’ parents had much more influence on soldiers’ willingness to pursue this technology t
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Atherton, Rosalind. "En ventre sa frigidaire: posthumous children in the succession context." Legal Studies 19, no. 2 (1999): 139–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-121x.1999.tb00090.x.

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A principal concern of inheritance law is defining the relatedness of individuals. In this context the posthumously born child has to be defined in or out of a kinship network for inheritance purposes. Historically the concerns were ones of paternity and, with it, legitimacy. For the posthumously born child these were vital questions, as the illegitimate child was nullius filius, the son of nobody, and disentitled from inheritance. While modern inheritance law has moved away from the disabilities that illegitimacy once entailed, the responses to questions of relatedness in the context of child
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TEMIRSHINA, OLESYA R. "A. VVEDENSKY’S ‘PERSONAL ESCHATOLOGY’: POSTHUMOUS JOURNEY IN THE SEVENTH POEM." Lomonosov Journal of Philology, no. 3, 2023 (June 19, 2023): 120–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.55959/msu0130-0075-9-2023-47-3-10.

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The article presents the interpretation of the Seventh Poem by A. Vvedensky in the lexical-grammatical and genrestyle aspects. It is shown that the plot of the posthumous journey of the soul unfolds in Vvedensky’s text. It has been established that each stage of this plot unity is associated with the metamorphosis of the subject, which is marked by anomalies of subject and pronominal deixis. Deictic shifts indicate different stages of the dissolution of the soul in the world, thus, the splitting of the pronominal deixis performs a compositional function, marking the turning points of the plot
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Posthumous child"

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Iepson, Sarah M. "Postmortem Relationships: Death and the Child in Antebellum American Visual Culture." Diss., Temple University Libraries, 2013. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/236801.

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Art History<br>Ph.D.<br>Since Roland Barthes published Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography in 1982, the prevailing theory about photography has revolved around its primary role as a manifestation of transience, death, and mortality. Whether one promotes the philosophy that the photographic image steals away the soul and promotes death, or that it simply captures images of those that have died or will die, the photograph has been commonly interpreted as a visual reminder of the finality of human life. At no time does such an interpretation appear to be more tangibly true than during the m
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Books on the topic "Posthumous child"

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Caldwell, Lesley, and Helen Taylor Robinson, eds. The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190271428.001.0001.

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Volume 10, Therapeutic Consultations in Child Psychiatry, a posthumous publication of twenty-one case histories of children and adolescents taken over a ten-year period, is introduced by the Florentine analyst and child and adolescent psychiatrist, Marco Armellini. It concerns the application of psychoanalysis to child psychiatry. The technique in these reported cases usually takes the form of what Winnicott describes as the Squiggle Game. Winnicott states that what happens in the game and in the whole interview depends on the use made of the child’s experience, including the material that pre
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Bernstein, Neil W. Poppaea Sabina. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197678299.001.0001.

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Abstract We must work through layers of fantasy in order to uncover the life of Poppaea Sabina (ca. 30–65 ce). As the ancient sources tell it, Poppaea pushed the young emperor Nero to murder his mother, execute his wife Octavia, marry her, and make her his empress—and then, a few years later, kick her to death in a drunken rage. Her brief marriage to the emperor Nero occasioned political, religious, and social innovation. Nero was the first emperor to represent his wife as a near-equal on his coinage, and the couple was also celebrated by a group of claquers called “Neropoppaeans.” Their daugh
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Caldwell, Lesley, and Helen Taylor Robinson, eds. The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med:psych/9780190271435.001.0001.

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Volume 11 of the Collected Works, with an introduction by the British analyst Professor Steven Groarke, consists of two books of Winnicott’s writings, Human Nature and The Piggle, both published posthumously. Human Nature gathers together Winnicott’s own teaching notes on the subject of human growth and development with other unpublished writings from this period. Winnicott reflects on the vast subject of human nature from his own experience, returning throughout to certain topics of continuing interest for him, including psyche-soma and the mind, health and ill health, the body and psychologi
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Book chapters on the topic "Posthumous child"

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Adams, Catherine, Sean Groten, and Yin Yin. "Tomorrow’s Networked Posthumans: Phenomenological Reflections on the Child and Artificial Intelligence." In Research in Networked Learning. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-62780-4_8.

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"The Eternal Child." In Posthumous People. Stanford University Press, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781503622487-025.

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"A Posthumous Child." In Forgetting Fathers. State University of New York Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.18377159.9.

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"4 A Posthumous Child." In Forgetting Fathers. SUNY Press, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1515/9781438458939-006.

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Živojinović, Dragica. "POSTHUMNO ZAČEĆE U EVROPSKIM PRAVIMA I NOVOM SRPSKOM ZAKONODAVSTVU." In XXI vek - vek usluga i uslužnog prava : Knj. 9. University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Law, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/xxiv-9.247z.

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The possibility of preserving reproductive material (reproductive cells, tissues and early embryos) and their later use in human assisted procreation for empregnating and child birth purposes, pushes the limits of human fertility capabilities and makes the child conception possible beyond the period of his parent's life. Given the fact that posthumous conception has brought medical revolution in the field of human reproductive potentials, in this paper the author focuses her interest on reviewing European and national laws which regulate this matter in the context whether it should be allowed or not. Having described the concept and meaning of posthumous conception and why it is the subject of numerous debates, the author further explains that only a few European legisaltions are favourably inclined towards this scientific possibility, while the majority actually either forbits, or ignores it. Analyzing the provisions of the new Law on biomedical assisted fertilization which regulate the subject of posthumous conception, the author concludes that our legislation follows the European trend forbidding this form of assisted fertilization. In the final part of the paper, the author presents the arguments for and against posthumous conception concluding that prevail those which cannot support its justification.
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Drewery, Claire. "‘Which of my many […] hundreds of selves?’ Extending Mansfield’s Posthumous Literary Reception." In Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474439657.003.0016.

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Pierce Butler, A Child of the Sun (Mount Desert: Beech Hill, 2016), 184 pp., £11.50. ISBN 9780990820086 Sandra Jobson, ‘Introduction’, in D. H. Lawrence, The Lost Girl (Strawberry Hills, NSW: Svengali Press, 2016), 496 pp., £22.30. ISBN 9781925416473 Gerri Kimber, Katherine Mansfield: The Early Years...
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Claydon, Tony, and W. A. Speck. "The triumph of Orangism." In William and Mary. Oxford University PressOxford, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199217540.003.0001.

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Abstract king of England, Scotland, and Ireland, and prince of Orange, was born in the Binnenh of Palace in The Hague on 14 November 1650 NS. He was the posthumous and only child of William II, prince of Orange (1626–1650), who had died from smallpox eight days before he was born, and of his consort, Mary (1631–1660), eldest daughter of Charles I and princess royal of England. He was baptized Willem Hendrik (William Henry) on 15 January 1651 NS.
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Crawford, Robert. "T. S. Eliot’s Daughter1." In Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 167, 2009 Lectures. British Academy, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197264775.003.0015.

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This chapter presents the text of a lecture on T.S. Eliot's poetry given at the British Academy's 2009 Warton Lecture on English Poetry. This text discusses issues concerning biography and Eliot's posthumous reputation. It analyses Eliot's poem Marina and argues that it is one of the greatest parent-child poems in the English language. It explains the this work was written in Eliot's career when he was coming to terms with the loss of his parents, with his own childlessness, and with what it might mean to be a godparent.
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Gil Mendonça, Cláudia, Marina Bonissato Frattari, and Otávio Rezende. "A MANIFESTAÇÃO NEGATIVA DE VONTADE COMO FATOR DETERMINANTE PARA O NÃO RECONHECIMENTO DA PATERNIDADE SOCIOAFETIVA POST MORTEM." In Direito atual em análise, vol. I. Iberojur Science Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.62140/cmmfor2512024.

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Abstract: In contemporary Family Law, affection gains special emphasis, admitting the possibility of parenthood arising from bonds of affection, and not just that kinship formed by biology or civil. Socio-affective parenthood can be recognized during life or posthumously, but this requires requirements that reflect the intention of the parties. To this end, the objective of this work is to discuss the topic of post-mortem socio-affective parenting, listing the manifestation of negative will by the person who would be a socio-affective father or mother not to establish this legal bond as a decision-making factor for the magistrate when deciding on the demand. The work was prepared in 3 parts, which addresses the types of parenting in the national legal system, post-mortem socio-affective parenting present in REsp. n. 1500999 and, finally, brings the expression of will in a legal instrument as a factor to be considered for the non-recognition of socio-affective affiliation. This is a research with a deductive methodology, with a qualitative focus and applied nature, which uses bibliographic and documentary research as an investigation technique. In the end, it was found that the recognition of posthumous parenthood is possible if the requirements that make up the possession of the status of a child are met, especially, but if there is a negative expression on the part of the caregiver, this must be considered for the judge's decision. Keywords: Socio-affective affiliation. Socio-affective parenting. Post mortem. Manifestation of will.
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Friedwald, Will. "Postscript: The Afterlife." In Straighten Up and Fly Right. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190882044.003.0012.

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During Christmas 1964, three members of the Cole family were in the hospital: Nat, in Los Angeles, and his father, in Chicago, were essentially on their deathbeds, but Nat’s oldest child, Carole was bringing a new life into the world. Nat’s granddaughter, eventually named Caroline Clarke, was born on Christmas 1964, but Nat wouldn’t live to meet her. In the meantime, Nat’s last album, L-O-V-E, was successfully released in January. His father died on February 1, followed by Nat in the early hours after Valentine’s Day. This chapter talks briefly about his posthumous legacy but concludes with an account of his funeral in 1965, in which the primary eulogy was given by friend Jack Benny, who said, poignantly, “Time, as always, will work its healing ways. And I know that someday the dew drops will glisten on the ‘Ramblin’ rose’ again. The ‘Ballerina’ will dance again, and the ‘Mona Lisa’ will smile.”
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