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ADVISORY BOARD

Nanette Elster

Nanette Elster is a partner at Spence & Elster, P.C., a Chicago-area law firm working in the area of fertility law. She is also an Affiliated Scholar with the Institute on Biotechnology and the Human Future at Chicago-Kent College of Law/Illinois Institute of Technology.

Elster has extensive experience in the legal, public health, and ethical issues related to women's and children's health, and has been on faculty at the Institute for Health, Law and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Medicine, and Chicago-Kent College of Law.

She has spoken out nationally and internationally, and is the author of numerous articles on genetic and reproductive health with a particular focus on legal and ethical implications, including: "ARTistic License: Should Assisted Reproductive Technologies be Regulated?" in ART: Today and Beyond, edited by Christopher DeJonge and Christopher Barratt; "Stem Cell Research: Ethical Issues for Women in Donating Eggs and Embryos" in Human Rights; "HIV and ART: Reproductive Choices and Challenges" in The Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy (2003); "Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Contracts, Consents & Controversies" in the American Journal of Family Law; "Future Uses of Residual Newborn Blood Spots" in Jurimetrics; and "ART for the Masses? Racial and Ethnic Inequality in Assisted Reproductive Technologies" in DePaul Health Law Journal. Currently, Elster serves on the advisory board of the Chicago Center for Jewish Genetic Disorders. In addition, she served for three years as an ad hoc member of the ABA Coordinating Group on Bioethics and the Law.

Elster holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a law degree from Loyola University School of Law, and a Master of Public Health degree from Boston University School of Public Health.

"Americans have always defined themselves in terms of the future. It is therefore astonishing that there is no policy institute on emerging technologies in the nation's capital, one that cuts across philosophical lines. C-PET addresses that absence in our national conversation."

—JONATHAN MORENO