Description
Book SynopsisDelivering Policy explores how the tension between science and politics shaped the long and fraught path to Canada’s Assisted Human Reproduction Act.
Trade ReviewIn Delivering Policy, Francesca Scala provides a comprehensive, fascinating and well-written study of the evolution of assisted reproductive technology policies in Canada. Through the concept of boundary work, Scala demonstrates how different actors – scientists, policy-makers, activists - have attempted to challenge, blur or reinforce the boundary between science and politics since the appointment of the Royal Commission on New Reproductive Technologies in 1989. Weaving a detailed analysis of policy documents with engaging testimonies from participants in those debates, the book ultimately presents a nuanced and persuasive account of the impact of discursive strategies and the broader political and institutional contexts.
-- Prize Jury, 2020 Donald Smiley Prize
Table of Contents1 Politics, Science, and ARTs Policy in Canada
2 Normalizing and Resisting Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Canadian and Comparative Perspectives
3 Claiming and Contesting Epistemic Authority: The Royal Commission on New Reproductive Technologies
4 Science and the Public Weigh In: The Discursive Terrain of ARTs Policy Making
5 “Proceed with Care”: (Re)negotiating the Science/Politics Divide
6 Setting Boundaries and Crafting ARTs Legislation
7 Science, Boundary Work, and Parliamentary Politics: The Passing of Bill C-6
8 Understanding Boundary Work and ARTs Policy in Canada
Notes; References; Index