Daisy Deomampo is Associate Professor of Anthropology, Fordham University. She is the author of Transnational Reproduction: Race, Kinship, and Commercial Surrogacy in India.
Building upon the classic feminist concept of stratified reproduction, Deomampo is the first to offer a powerful critique of the racialization inherent in transnational surrogacy practices. Combining detailed ethnography with critical medical anthropological perspectives, Transnational Reproduction is both hard-hitting and provocative, challenging the race, class, and gender inequities underlying India's commercial gestational surrogacy scene. -Marcia C. Inhorn,author of Cosmopolitan Conceptions: IVF Sojourns in Global Dubai Deomampo shows in exquisite detail how racialized fantasies, stereotypes, and prejudices knot together the long-distance, cross-border threads of intimate commerce and citizenship involved in Indian surrogacy. European, North American, Australian, and other commissioning parents are connected to their Indian surrogates and entrepreneurial providers through diverse legal and social connections, yet all involve prior powerful notions of race at the heart of transnational family-making. This focus enriches and complicates discussions of Indian surrogacy. -Rayna Rapp,New York University