Women most fully experience the consequences of human reproductive
technologies. Men who convene to evaluate such technologies discuss
Itthem " the women who must accept, avoid, or even resist these
technologies; the women who consume technologies they did not devise;
the women who are the objects of policies made by of women is neither
sought nor listened to. The men. So often the input and perspectives
that women bring to the privileged insights consideration of
technologies in human reproduction are the subject of these volumes,
which constitute the revised and edited record of a Workshop on "Ethical
Issues in Human Reproduction Technology: Analysis by W omen" (EIR TAW),
held in June, 1979, at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. Some
80 members of the workshop, 90 percent of them women (from 24 states),
represented diverse occupations and personal histories, different races
and classes, varied political commitments. They included doctors,
nurses, and scientists, lay midwives, consumer advocates, historians,
and sociologists, lawyers, policy analysts, and ethicists. Each session,
however, made plain that ethics is an everyday concern for women in
general, as well as an academic profession for some.