Lavender Law conference: talking of surrogacy in San Francisco

Lavender Law conference: talking of surrogacy in San Francisco

A couple of weeks ago I attended the LGBT Family Law Institute conference in San Francisco. The conference is limited to 125 family lawyers who have not only acted for LGBT clients, but also publicly advocated for LGBT people. To get in, a lawyer must be vetted by the other members first.
I was privileged, as an Australian lawyer, to attend. I had been asked to go by the executive director of the American Academy of Assisted Reproductive Technology Attorneys (AAARTA) Ms Judy Sperling-Newton. Judy was right to suggest that I go, because there was lots to talk about which was very familiar to me.

I always like going to conferences when I learn new things, discover new people, catch up with old friends, and above all by sharing problems discover new ways of tackling them. Family Law Institute was all of those for me.

For example, many issues to do with surrogacy and ART. An example- a trend which I am seeing more and more often is a lesbian couple (and which I discovered was more and more common in the US), one of whom becomes the genetic mum, and whose fertilised eggs are placed in the other, who becomes the birth mum. While these arrangements may seem at face value to be wonderful- in that each woman becomes the mother of their child, and that as a matter of law in Australia each woman is equally a parent of the child, in a number of cases I have seen (which did not involve the transfer of eggs), which were litigated or negotiated, the woman who gave birth felt a much stronger bond with the children, and at some level felt that she was the mother, and the other woman was not.

I am of the view that women contemplating undertaking such an arrangement should get knowledgeable legal advice before fertilisation occurs, so that they know exactly what could happen.

While at the conference I was lucky to catch up with colleagues, including my good friend and fellow American Bar Association committee member Rich Vaughn. Rich is a leading ART attorney from Los Angeles.

The LGBT Family Law Institute conference is an offshoot of the main Lavender Law conference, run by the LGBT Bar Association, an affiliate of the American Bar Association. Lavender Law is huge- one of those conferences that appears to morph and take over everything in the middle distance. It was a conference with a strong emphasis on equality. One of the most amazing things to hear was from a US lawyer who said that some of the leading US experts in his field were there- people so lofty it was almost impossible to contact them- but here they were, willing to share knowledge.

Request an Appointment
Fill in the form below to find out if you have a claim.
Request an Appointment - Stephen Page
Things to Read, Watch & Listen

IFFS Brisbane 2027: World’s Largest Fertility & Surrogacy Conference Coming to Queensland

The next World Congress of the International Federation of Fertility Societies is meeting in Brisbane from 18-21 April 2027. In the words of the International Fertility Society: “IFFS is excited to build on this momentum and partner with the Fertility Society of Australia and New Zealand (FSANZ) to deliver an extraordinary event that brings together… Read More »IFFS Brisbane 2027: World’s Largest Fertility & Surrogacy Conference Coming to Queensland

Surrogacy Ethics Conference Australia: Key Insights from the Law Council’s First Donor & Surrogacy Ethics Event

Donor & Surrogacy Ethics Conference Recently, I took part in the family law section of the Law Council of Australia’s first surrogacy and donor ethics conference, held in Melbourne. I want to give a shout out to my Melbourne colleague, Sarah Jefford OAM who had the gumption in putting it all together and then roped… Read More »Surrogacy Ethics Conference Australia: Key Insights from the Law Council’s First Donor & Surrogacy Ethics Event

The Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) Review of Surrogacy Laws

The Australian Law Reform Commission has released a substantial discussion paper as part of a broad review of surrogacy laws. The paper examines how surrogacy could and should be regulated within Australia, including both domestic arrangements and situations where intended parents commission surrogacy overseas. Submissions on the discussion paper close on 19 December 2024, and… Read More »The Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) Review of Surrogacy Laws

Family Law Section Law Council of Australia Award
Member of Queensland law society
Family law Practitioners Association
International Academy of Family Lawyers - IAFL
Mediator Standards Board