Gamble & Ghevaert

Archive for the ‘lesbian parenting’ Category

Stonewall publishes guide to the new laws on gay parenting

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

We have worked with leading gay rights organisation Stonewall to produce a guide to the new laws on gay and lesbian parenting, called Parenthood for Same Sex Couples. Funded by the Big Lottery Fund, the guide aims to provide clear information to service providers about the law on same sex conception and parenting, including donor insemination (and the new legal rights for lesbian couples to be named on birth certificates), co-parenting arrangements, and UK and international surrogacy for gay men. The guide will be distributed to key service providers nationally (including law centres) and is available on the Stonewall website.

We are delighted to have helped with this project, as we think it is vitally important for there to be good and widespread understanding of the UK’s new fertility laws which rightly recognise gay and lesbian couples as parents of children they conceive together.

Read ‘Parenthood for Same Sex Couples’.

More information on gay surrogacy law from our website.

More information on donor insemination and co-parenting law from our website.

More information about our public service work and fertility law services to charities.

Same sex partners to be named on birth certificates from tomorrow

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Natalie Gamble was interviewed on the BBC Radio 5 Live Breakfast Show this morning about the new rights for same sex partners to be named on the birth certificates of children they conceive together.

For lesbian couples, new rules allow the non birth mother to be named as the child’s other parent if the couple conceive through donor insemination or IVF together. Although the law change came into force on 6 April 2009, it only applies to children conceived after that date. The government has calculated that, allowing for some early arrivals, this means the soonest a child could be born under the new rules is 1 September 2009. From tomorrow, therefore, registrars around the UK will be prepped and ready to register births showing two women as a child’s parents.

On the Radio 5 Breakfast Show, Natalie was also asked whether gay men could also be named on birth certificates together. As Natalie explained, gay men conceiving with a surrogate mother will be able to obtain a birth certificate showing them both as parents, but that the changes for gay couples are coming into effect later. Gay men, like heterosexual couples, will have to apply to court for a reissue of the birth certificate after a surrogacy birth. They will be able to make such applications from 6 April 2010 although, unlike the new rules for lesbian couples, applications can be made for children born before the law changed.

We welcome the changes to both the donor conception and surrogacy rules to cover gay and lesbian parents. The move represents an important step forward in recognising gay and lesbian families, and ensuring that two parents who commit to having a child together are both legally recognised as being responsible for that child.

More information on lesbian conception law from our website.

More information on surrogacy law from our website.

Family Law publishes article on the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Leading legal journal Family Law has published our article (The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008: Revolution or Evolution?) which looks at how the 2008 Act was heralded in Parliament as the first major update of UK fertility law in 18 years, and asks whether it has really made assisted reproduction law fit for the twenty-first century.  The article puts the new legislation in context, examining the history of UK fertility law and how it has developed, explaining the changes introduced by the 2008 Act (in particular the new rights for same sex parents which are dealt with in a practical case study) and highlighting some of the remaining problems for fertility patients and parents conceiving through assisted reproduction and in alternative family structures.

More on fertility treatment law from our website.

More on lesbian conception law from our website.

Natalie Gamble named by Diva as one of Britain’s most influential women

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Glossy magazine DIVA has included Natalie in its ‘Power 50′ list of the 50 most influential gay women in Britain. Natalie’s write-up mentions her involvement with the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 and the new rights it gives to gay and lesbian parents, as well as her nomination by Stonewall for their 2008 Hero of the Year Award.

“I am flattered and honoured to be included” says Natalie. “We have seen enormous strides over the past few years towards legal equality for gay and lesbian families. I am proud to have helped champion changes in fertility law which help same sex parents to be treated in the same way as other couples when they conceive with donor sperm or through surrogacy.”

DIVA’s list also includes household names such as TV presenters Sue Perkins and Sandy Toksvig and actresses Fiona Shaw and Miriam Margolyes, as well as politicians, public figures and other leading professionals in their fields. Read ‘Power 50: Britain’s most influential gay women‘.

More on the law for lesbian couples conceiving together from the Gamble and Ghevaert website.

Stonewall’s Pregnant Pause: a guide for lesbians on how to get pregnant

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

Stonewall has launched a beautifully illustrated new publication for lesbians who are thinking of starting a family. Called Pregnant Pause, it gives a wealth of up to date information on the different options available to lesbian parents, including NHS funded fertility treatment, private treatment, home insemination with a known donor and co-parenting, and covers the legal and practical issues. The guide was put together to celebrate the new rights for lesbian parents introduced by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008 which came into force on 6 April 2009, with the aim of giving accurate information to couples thinking of starting a family through donor conception.

We are proud to have been involved in the project, contributing the legal information included in the guide, which we hope will be useful to many prospective parents.

Read ‘Pregnant Pause: a guide for lesbians on how to get pregnant’ or request a free printed copy from Stonewall (info@stonewall.org.uk or 08000 50 20 20).

More information on the law for lesbian couples conceiving together from our website.