This book addresses the debate usually tagged as being about 'markets in
human body parts' which is antagonistically divided into pro-market and
anti-market positions. The author provides a set of propositions about
how to approach this and shows a way out of the concrete impasse of it.
Assumptions about markets and bodies that characterize this debate are
analyzed and described while the author argues that these assumptions
are in fact constitutive for exchanges of human bodily material - but in
unacknowledged ways. It is concluded that what we need is a different
analytical approach to better understand the mechanisms at play when
organizations exchange organs, tissues and cells for use in
transplantation and fertility medicine.