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Erica Haimes
Erica Haimes
Professor of Sociology, PEALS. Newcastle University
Verified email at ncl.ac.uk
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
What can the social sciences contribute to the study of ethics? Theoretical, empirical and substantive considerations
E Haimes
Bioethics 16 (2), 89-113, 2002
3142002
Adoption, identity and social policy: The search for distant relatives
E Haimes, N Timms
Studies in Social Policy and Welfare, 1985
1451985
‘Everybody’s got a dad...’. Issues for lesbian families in the management of donor insemination
E Haimes, K Weiner
Sociology of Health & Illness 22 (4), 477-499, 2000
1352000
Issues of gender in gamete donation
E Haimes
Social science & medicine 36 (1), 85-93, 1993
1241993
Social and ethical issues in the use of familial searching in forensic investigations: insights from family and kinship studies
E Haimes
The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 34 (2), 263-276, 2006
1152006
Donor insemination: international social science perspectives
KR Daniels, E Haimes
Cambridge University Press, 1998
911998
Demographic, medical and treatment characteristics associated with couples’ decisions to donate fresh spare embryos for research
M Choudhary, E Haimes, M Herbert, M Stojkovic, AP Murdoch
Human Reproduction 19 (9), 2091-2096, 2004
802004
Eggs, ethics and exploitation? Investigating women’s experiences of an egg sharing scheme
E Haimes, K Taylor, I Turkmendag
Sociology of Health & Illness 34 (8), 1199-1214, 2012
762012
“So, what is an embryo?” A comparative study of the views of those asked to donate embryos for hESC research in the UK and Switzerland
E Haimes, R Porz, J Scully, C Rehmann-Sutter
New Genetics and Society 27 (2), 113-126, 2008
702008
Recreating the family? Policy considerations relating to the ‘new’reproductive technologies
E Haimes
The new reproductive technologies, 154-172, 1990
701990
Gamete donation and the social management of genetic origins
E Haimes
Changing human reproduction: Social science perspectives, 1992
691992
‘Secrecy’: what can artificial reproduction learn from adoption?
E Haimes
International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family 2 (1), 46-61, 1988
661988
Levels and styles of participation in genetic databases: a case study of the North Cumbria Community Genetics Project
E Haimes, M Whong-Barr
Genetic Databases, 57-77, 2004
582004
Sociology, ethics, and the priority of the particular: learning from a case study of genetic deliberations
E Haimes, R Williams
The British journal of sociology 58 (3), 457-476, 2007
562007
Fresh embryo donation for human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research: the experiences and values of IVF couples asked to be embryo donors
E Haimes, K Taylor
Human Reproduction 24 (9), 2142-2150, 2009
552009
Design, recruitment, logistics, and data management of the GEHA (Genetics of Healthy Ageing) project
A Skytthe, S Valensin, B Jeune, E Cevenini, F Balard, M Beekman, ...
Experimental gerontology 46 (11), 934-945, 2011
512011
Ethics and Society: Do clinicians benefit from gamete donor anonymity?
EV Haimes
Human Reproduction 8 (9), 1518-1520, 1993
481993
Embodied spaces, social places and Bourdieu: Locating and dislocating the child in family relationships
E Haimes
Body & Society 9 (1), 11-33, 2003
372003
The making of ‘the DI child’: changing representations of people conceived through donor insemination
E Haimes
Donor insemination: International social science perspectives, 53-75, 1998
351998
Studying potential donors' views on embryonic stem cell therapies and preimplantation genetic diagnosis
E Haimes, J Luce
Human Fertility 9 (2), 67-71, 2006
302006
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