Hashiloni-Dolev, Yael, and Zvi Triger. 2016. “Between the Deceased S Wish and the Wishes of His Surviving Relatives: Posthumous Children, Patriarchy, Pronatalism, and the Myth of Continuity of the Seed”. Tel Aviv UL Rev. 39: 661.
Publications by Type: Journal Article
2016
2015
Hashiloni-Dolev, Yael. 2015. “Posthumous Reproduction (PHR) in Israel: Policy Rationales versus Lay People’s Concerns, a Preliminary Study”. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 39 (4): 634-50.
2014
Hashiloni-Dolev, Y, D Hacker, and H Boas. 2014. “The Will of the Deceased: Three Israeli Case Studies”. Israeli Sociology 15 (1): 31-53.
Hashiloni-Dolev, Y, G Hirsh-Yechezkel, , T. Wainstock, E Schiff, and Liat Lerner-Geva. 2014. “Sex Selection in Israel: Policy versus Potential Users’ Attitudes.”. Megamot 49 (3): 555-75.
2012
Shkedi-Rafid, Shiri, and Yael Hashiloni-Dolev. 2012. “Egg Freezing for Non-Medical Uses: The Lack of a Relational Approach to Autonomy in the New Israeli Policy and in Academic Discussion”. Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (3): 154-57.
2011
Shalev, Carmel, and Yael Hashiloni-Dolev. 2011. “Bioethics Governance in Israel: An Expert Regime”. Global Summit of National Ethics Committees: An Essential Tool for International Dialogue and Consensus-Building. 154 8 (3).
Shkedi-Rafid, Shiri, and Yael Hashiloni-Dolev. 2011. “Egg Freezing for Age-Related Fertility Decline: Preventive Medicine or a Further Medicalization of Reproduction? Analyzing the New Israeli Policy”. Fertility and Sterility 96 (2): 291-94.
Rimon-Zarfaty, Nitzan, Aviad E Raz, and Yael Hashiloni-Dolev. 2011. “When Does a Fetus Become a Person? An Israeli Viewpoint”. Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care 37 (4): 216-24.
Hashiloni-Dolev, Yael, Amit Kaplan, and Shiri Shkedi-Rafid. 2011. “The Fertility Myth: Israeli Studentsknowledge Regarding Age-Related Fertility Decline and Late Pregnancies in an Era of Assisted Reproduction Technology”. Human Reproduction 26 (11): 3045-53.
2010
Shalom, Y., and Y Hashiloni-Dolev. 2010. “Fertility Patient’s Views Regarding the Moral Status and the Appropriate Use of Frozen Pre-Embryos.”. Health Law and Bioethics 3: 175-210.