‘This neo- natal ménage à trois’: British media framing of transnational surrogacy

Article


van den Akker, O., Fronek, P., Blyth, E. and Frith, L. 2016. ‘This neo- natal ménage à trois’: British media framing of transnational surrogacy. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology. 34 (1), pp. 15-27. https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2015.1106454
TypeArticle
Title‘This neo- natal ménage à trois’: British media framing of transnational surrogacy
Authorsvan den Akker, O., Fronek, P., Blyth, E. and Frith, L.
Abstract

Background: Media framing can influence people’s perceptions of social changes in family building, and has the potential to influence their future actions.
Objectives: to analyse the type of framing and construction used in British news print of transnational commercial surrogacy.
Methods: UK newspapers were searched using the search engine Lexis-Nexis. One hundred ninety seven articles were analysed. Content analysis was undertaken to identify the use of gain, loss, neutral, alarm and vulnerability frames, as well as type of construction (i.e. ethical, social, legal, financial and medical). Four researchers independently analysed articles using a coding strategy.
Results: Differences between serious (mainly legal, financial), middle market (legal) and tabloid (social, financial) newspapers were found. There were three main foci; buying babies - affordable only to those wealthy enough to pay for it; the legal complications of transnational surrogacy - reporting a sense of the legal system lagging behind this practice; and gay families - repeatedly questioning their suitability as parents - demonstrating a prevailing heterosexual stereotype about reproduction and parenting. Conclusions: Stereotyping was prevalent and the welfare of children and medical aspects of transnational surrogacy were minimally addressed, indicating the media selectively influences its readership.

KeywordsSurrogacy, Transnational, Commercial, Commissioning, British, Media
Research GroupApplied Health Psychology group
PublisherRoutledge
JournalJournal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology
ISSN0264-6838
Publication dates
Print12 Jan 2016
Publication process dates
Deposited04 Mar 2016
Accepted20 Aug 2015
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Copyright Statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology on 17/11/2015, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/02646838.2015.1106454

Additional information

Published online: 17 Nov 2015

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/02646838.2015.1106454
LanguageEnglish
Permalink -

https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/8626x

  • 30
    total views
  • 18
    total downloads
  • 1
    views this month
  • 1
    downloads this month

Export as