Thompson, C. Why we should, in fact, pay for egg donation. Regenerative Medicine 2, 203–209. (2007) http://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/abs/10.2217/17460751.2.2.203 In a perspective in Regenerative Medicine, Charis Thompson argues that women who donate eggs for human embryonic stem cell research ought to be compensated

Thompson, C. Making parents: The ontological choreography of reproductive technologies MIT Press, US (2005) http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=10491 This book by Charis Thompson examines the normalization of the 'miraculous technology' of assisted reproduction, along with the accompanying issues for ethics, economics, and gender relations.

Saha, K., Graff, G. & Winickoff, D. Enabling Stem Cell Research and Development. Center for the Study of Law and Society, Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, University of California, Berkeley, Faculty Working Papers. Paper 48. (April 27, 2007). http://repositories.cdlib.org/csls/fwp/48 In a working paper, academics led by David Winickoff argue that even as funding for stem-cell research expands, technical, proprietary, and regulatory conditions are far from ideal

Thompson, Charis, 2008. "Stem Cells, Women, and the New Gender and Science," in Londa Schiebinger, ed., Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering. Stanford University Press, pp. 109–130. In this article, Thompson pursues the thought experiment of what might represent women's views on stem cell research beyond egg procurement

Nakatsuji, N. Irrational Japanese regulations hinder human embryonic stem cell research. Nature Rep. Stem Cells. 9 August 2007 http://www.nature.com/stemcells/2007/0708/070809/full/stemcells.2007.66.html In this commentary from Nature Reports Stem Cells, Norio Nakatsuji describes irrationality in Japanese regulations governing embryonic stem cell research

Enabling stem cell research and development In a working paper, academics led by David Winickoff argue that even as funding for stem-cell research expands, technical, proprietary, and regulatory conditions are far from ideal.