fellow

Raquel Medina Plana

2025-2026
Home institution
Complutense University of Madrid
Country of origin (home institution)
Spain
Discipline(s)
Health Sciences; Law; Medicine
Theme(s)
Human Rights
Fellowship dates
Biography

Raquel Medina Plana's research lies at the intersection of legal anthropology and the history of law, with a particular emphasis on the critical analysis of legal phenomena from culturally and historically informed perspectives. Her primary focus is family law, where she examines foundational concepts such as kinship, filiation, and the socio-legal constructions of belonging embedded within family institutions. In recent years, she has led an interdisciplinary research group investigating the legal and normative implications of emerging family configurations, including single-parent households and families formed through assisted reproductive technologies.

In addition to these areas of inquiry, her specialization as a legal historian has guided her toward historical research. She is currently conducting archival work on a profoundly significant historical phenomenon in Spain: the case of children taken from their families during the Franco regime. This topic extends her earlier studies on fostering and adoption practices involving abandoned children in institutional care during the Ancien Régime, as well as on the displacement of children during the Spanish Civil War.

Research Project
Reproductive Futures: Law, Kinship, and Identity in Assisted Reproductive Technologies

In this fellowship project, Raquel Medina Plana investigates the socio-legal dimensions of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) through a transdisciplinary lens, engaging with frameworks of reproductive markets, biopolitics, reproductive justice, and governance.

With a transdisciplinary perspective, the research examines how legislative, economic, ethical, and symbolic systems regulate reproductive practices—and how these forms of regulation shape behaviors, expectations, and representations surrounding family, kinship, and identity. Particular attention is devoted to the emerging voices of individuals born through ART involving third-party gamete donation, whose growing demands for legal and political recognition challenge established understandings of parenthood and belonging.

Key areas of inquiry include the lifting of donor anonymity, the role of genetic discourse in reconfiguring kinship, and the complex negotiations between industry interests and the rights of donor-conceived individuals. Through this analysis, the project seeks to illuminate the evolving intersections of law, technology, and intimate life in contemporary societies.

Research Interests:

assisted reproductive technologies; reproductive justice; biopolitics; socio-legal studies; reproductive markets; governance; family law; kinship; identity; genetic discourse; donor anonymity; parenthood; legal recognition; bioethics; gender studies.