On 8 October 2025, Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters (SRHM) co-hosted a global webinar titled Surrogacy as a Matter of Sexual and Reproductive Justice in partnership with the Just Futures Collaborative, Center for Reproductive Rights, Initiative for Strategic Litigation in Africa (ISLA), and the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice. This event situated surrogacy within the wider framework of sexual and reproductive justice, human rights, and bodily autonomy. The webinar explored human-rights approaches to surrogacy, the effects of criminalization and prohibition, and evidence-informed regulatory and feminist perspectives. The discussion showed how surrogacy can be grounded in autonomy, dignity, equality, and protection from exploitation. Guided by an intersectional lens, the webinar examined how gender, sexuality, race, class, religion, migration, economic inequality, and labour rights shape surrogacy. Participants also considered evidence on how restrictive frameworks undermine rights and discuss strategies for coalition-building and advocacy across movements.
Speakers:
- Sarojini Nadimpally | Co-founder of Sama Resource Group for Women and Health
- Eng Chandy | Executive Director of Gender and Development for Cambodia (GADC)
- Verónica Esparza | Research Coordinator, Grupo de Información en Reproducción Elegida (GIRE)
- Nerima Were | Legal Director at The Initiative for Strategic Litigation in Africa (ISLA)
- Subha Wijesiriwardena | Co-director of Just Futures Collaborative
Moderator:
- Eszter Kismődi | Chief Executive of Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters
More content from this blog
- “Zionists Out of Finchley”? Issues for Anti-fascist and Anti-racist Activists, by Daniel Randall and Ben Gidley – 12 August 2024
- Dmitry Shumsky, Beyond the Nation-State, by Moshe Behar – December 2019
- Rainbow Extremism, by Liliya Vezhevatova – 18 December 2024
- Ruh Jedida: A New Spirit for 2011. Young Mizrahi Israelis’ Open Letter to Arab Peers – 19 April 2011
- East Germany – The Promised Land of the AfD, by Thomas Klikauer – 22 August 2025