While I was reading your post originally, I assumed surrogacy referred to another woman receiving an implantation of a fertilized egg from the intended parents, and then carrying that to term.
If that would be true it would be unlikley for you to reference a German law that only matters for gestational surrogacy and doesn’t have anything to do with adoption.
While I was reading your post originally, I assumed surrogacy referred to another woman receiving an implantation of a fertilized egg from the intended parents, and then carrying that to term.
So I just researched it, and apparently there are two types, which is why we’re confused here: “Traditional surrogacy” and “Gestational surrogacy”: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrogacy#Traditional_surrogacy
Yes, it would help to define which type you refer to, as I find them very different ethically. (Or at least, emotionally, as a woman).
If one doesn’t explicitly say it’s Gestational, then it’s traditional. Indeed though, mentioning it may help.
If that would be true it would be unlikley for you to reference a German law that only matters for gestational surrogacy and doesn’t have anything to do with adoption.