Abstract
Over the last two decades, social scientists across disciplines have been researching how value is extracted and governed in the reproductive bioeconomy, which broadly refers to the various ways reproductive tissues, bodies, services, customers, workers, and data are inserted into capitalist modes of accumulation. While many of these studies are empirically grounded in single country–based analyses, this paper proposes an integrative political economy framework, structured around the concept of “global fertility chains.” The latter articulates the reproductive bioeconomy as a nexus of intraconnected practices, operations, and transactions between enterprises, states, and households across the globe, through which reproductive services and commodities are produced, distributed, and consumed. Employing a diffractive reading of the literature on commodity chains and care chains, this unified approach scrutinizes the coproduction of value, biology, and technoscience and their governance mechanisms in the accumulation of capital by taking into account (1) the unevenly developed geographies of global fertility chains, (2) their reliance on women’s waged and unwaged reproductive labor, and (3) the networked role of multiple actors at multiple scales without losing sight of the (4) constitutive role of (supra)national states in creating demand, organizing supply, and accommodating the distribution of surplus value. We empirically ground this integrative political economy approach of the reproductive bioeconomy through collaborative, multisited fieldwork on transnational reproduction networks in Israel/Palestine, Romania, Georgia, and Spain.
Highlights
Tammuz Family is Israel’s first fertility agency with a specialization in surrogacy for same-sex couples
While a political economy framework on the reproductive bioeconomy can motivate a broad set of research questions and agendas, this paper proposes the concept of “global fertility chains” as a way both to theorize and to empirically map the global reorganization of reproductive processes as coproduced by the changing relations—or “intra-actions”—among capital, labor, nature/biology, technoscience, and their governance mechanisms (Barad 2007)
Drawing on the literature on global commodity/value chains (Hopkins and Wallerstein 1986; Gereffi and Korzeniewicz 1994; Bair 2005, 2008; Dunaway 2014; Mezzadri 2017) and production networks (Coe, Dicken, and Hess 2008; Kelly 2009; Rainnie, Herod, and Mcgrath-Champ 2011), on the one hand, and on global care chains, on the other hand (Salazar Parrenas 2001; Ehrenreich and Hochschild 2002; Yeates 2004), we propose a new political economy perspective to analyze the reproductive bioeconomy, centered on the concept of global fertility chains
Summary
Tammuz Family is Israel’s first fertility agency with a specialization in surrogacy for same-sex couples. We will unpack this integrative conceptualization of value extraction and governance in the reproductive bioeconomy by exploring examples of existing global fertility chains from our respective fieldwork on transnational reproduction networks in Israel, Romania, Georgia, and Spain.
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