co-maternity

English

Etymology

From co- +‎ maternity.

Noun

co-maternity (countable and uncountable, plural co-maternities)

  1. (LGBTQ) The state of being a co-mother; a mother to a child carried by another partner through reciprocal IVF (in vitro fertilization where one female partner supplies the ovum and the other carries the pregnancy).
    • 2007 January 13, Angela Campbell, “Conceiving Parents Through Law”, in International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family, volume 21, number 2, →DOI, →ISSN, page 256:
      Developments in jurisprudence and legislation thus suggest a growing openness to identifying a birth mother and her same-sex partner as a child’s ‘natural’ or ‘original’ parents whether that child has been conceived through assisted reproduction. But the idea of co-maternity still seems limited and tenuous.
    • 2009, Aslak Syse, Trude Haugli, Øivind Johansen, Anne Margrethe Lund, Margurethe Stenersen, Arne Sunde, Gitte Gulbrandsen, Geir Helgeland, Farskap og annen morskap: Fastsettelse og endring av foreldreskap (Norges offentlige utredninger) (overall work in Norwegian Bokmål and English), via National Library of Norway, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 17:
      The Commission has considered what rules should apply in connection with establishment of paternity, maternity and co-maternity for children born outside Norway as a result of assisted fertilisation.
      [original: Utvalget har vurdert hvilke regler som bør gjelde ved fastsettelse av farskap, morskap og medmorskap for barn som er født som et resultat av assistert befruktning i utlandet.]
    • 2016, Elizabeth F. Schwartz, “LGBT Issues in Surrogacy: Present and Future Challenges”, in E. Scott Sills, editor, Handbook of Gestational Surrogacy: International Clinical Practice and Policy Issues, Cambridge University Press, →DOI, →ISBN, page 60:
      The legal issues for those pursuing co-maternity or egg-sharing are no less complex. Recent cases have shown the need for competent legal representation from the very earliest stages of the family-formation process.
    • 2021, Isabel C. Jaramillo, “The Stakes in Sex: Obstacles and Oppurtunities in Legal Reform for Trans Persons”, in Isabel C. Jaramill, Laura Carlson, editors, Trans Rights and Wrongs: A Comparative Study of Legal Reform Concerning Trans Persons, Springer, →DOI, →ISBN, page 21:
      In the case of a woman who gives birth while married to a trans woman, the co-maternity arrangement adopted by Norway and a few other countries for the case of same sex couples seem to work well enough.
    • 2024 June 11, “Apply for recognition on paternity or co-maternity established abroad”, in nav.no[1], Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration, archived from the original on 11 October 2024:
      Paternity or co-maternity established abroad may be recognised in Norway.
      [original: Farskap eller medmorskap fastsatt i utlandet kan bli anerkjent i Norge.]

Translations