Mirror of Justice

A blog dedicated to the development of Catholic legal theory.
Affiliated with the Program on Church, State & Society at Notre Dame Law School.

Monday, June 9, 2008

State Interest in Nonmarital Friendship Relationships

With respect to the conversation initiated by Rob's post on Friends with Benefits, my colleague Elizabeth Brown suggests that part of the reason the state may choose to recognize such relationships "may be because the type of benefits that society gains are not tied to only very limited forms of relations (e.g., marriage, sexually-oriented relationships)."  She states:

"Businesses and the federal and state governments, which provide healthcare to individuals, already have a financial incentive to promotion friendship and other social relationships.  Research shows that not staying connected to other people through friendships and other relationships poses the same risk to your health as high blood pressure, obesity and even smoking. As staggering as that is, a trend toward smaller social networks and fewer close confidants is growing. 'More Americans in the last 20 years say that they have fewer close friends or people in their lives with whom they can discuss important matters,' says Duke University sociologist Lynn Smith-Lovin. 'What ties to a close-knit group of people does is create a safety net,' she adds.

"Doctors agree, and say that a good chat or regular girls' night out can do even more. 'Feeling cared for and supported within a social network is particularly important for women in fostering self-care,' says Todd Jackson, PhD, author of a study published this year linking high levels of social support and community involvement with healthier diet, exercise and sleep habits, among other positive effects.  As a result, people who enjoy high levels of social support would cost businesses and federal and state government less money than those who fail to form and maintain such relationships. 

"These benefits are not connected solely with marriage or sexual relationships.  If society benefits from the formation of these social networks, then it has an interest in promoting them and preventing their current decline."

Question for Michael

Regarding Michael S.'s response to Rob's post, I don't understand why Michael says it is "irrelvant to the state as to why someone would want to form such an association."  The state is being asked here to provide privileges to these nonmarital friendship relationships, some of which privileges will impose costs on some third parties that deal with this new unit (e.g., employers).  Doesn't that mean the state should have to articulate an interest in promoting such relationships before it provides these privileges?

Questions for Rob

Two questions in response to Rob's post, "Friends with Benefits." 

First, philosphically (setting aside the practical problems and costs for the moment), what would be wrong with the state adopting an "Intimate Associations Act."  These associations would be situated on a continuum between business associations and marriage (privileged domestic associations).  This form of partnership could be used by any two or more persons who decided to form intimate friendship (with unspecified rights and duties) whether sexual or not.  It could be used by two single brothers who want to share their lives in common.  It could be used by two sisters raising their dead brother's child.  It could be used by two or three friends who want to share life together.  And, it could be used by homosexual partners who don't have the benefit of marriage.  It would be irrelvant to the state as to why someone would want to form such an association and whether or not sex is involved (at least between consenting adults).

Second, you say "It is difficult to imagine marriage maintaining its privileged status (as I believe it should) twenty years from now if a significant portion of the population is ineligible."  Why?

Kmiec on Catholics, abortion, the Court, and the election

I saw my old friend Doug Kmiec on campus at Notre Dame today, which reminded me that I needed to grumble a bit about his most recent "Catholic Online" column, in which he discusses (again) the much-discussed question, "for whom should Catholics who embrace the Church's teachings on abortion vote?"

First, the (unfortunately) obligatory preface:  Neither Doug Kmiec nor anyone else should (or, I would think, may) be denied communion merely for supporting Sen. Obama's campaign rather than Sen. McCain's.  And, it is, I take it, the case that faithful Catholics can -- and many do -- believe that, given all the givens, the right course is to support Sen. Obama (or Sen. McCain) over Sen. McCain (or Sen. Obama).  In this context, I think we have (and Doug has) the "right to be wrong".

That said, Doug's column goes off course in a few places, I think.  He writes:

Given that abortion is an intrinsic evil without justification, thinking the overturning of Roe “solves” the abortion problem, when it does not, can mislead Catholics into the erroneous conclusion that any candidate unwilling to pledge reversal of Roe is categorically unworthy of support.

Yes and no.  True, overruling Roe does not, by a long shot, "solve" the abortion problem.  It would, however, do two very important things:  (a) It would solve another, serious, problem -- namely, it would undo the major error that was Roe, thereby improving the state of our constitutional law (about which Doug cares quite a bit); and (b) it would make it possible for We the People, acting through our legislatures, to take measures that might, bit by bit, "solve" the abortion problem.  The fact that overturning Roe does not, by itself, end abortion does not change the fact that the persistence of Roe effectively removes abortion from the arena of legislative (even if only incremental) action and compromise.  Doug writes:

Senator Obama’s position accepts the existing legal regime which leaves the abortion decision with the mother as a “constitutional right.” Senator McCain's position would leave the decision with the individual states. Neither position is fully pro-life, both are pro-choice, with the former focused on the individual and the latter focused on the right of the states. Senator McCain's position is sometimes described as pro-life, but in truth, it is merely pro-federalism (states being free under the McCain position to decide to permit or disallow abortion as they see fit).

But this is not quite right.  Sen. McCain's position is not (merely) pro-"the right of the states" or pro-"federalism"; it is pro-"the right of the People" to try to promote the common good through law.  Sen. McCain, unlike Sen. Obama, also supports a wide range of federal policies that regulate abortion and protect the consciences of pro-life citizens.  Doug continues:

Independent of my Catholic faith, as a constitutional law teacher, I respectfully disagree with both Senator Obama and Senator McCain since the Constitution was intended as a means to enforce and guarantee the unalienable right to life recited in the Declaration of Independence, where of course it is explicitly traced to our Creator. Since neither candidate presents a position fully compatible with Catholic teaching recognizing abortion for the intrinsic evil that it is, Catholic teaching asks us to work for the reduction of the incidence of abortion through the most prudent way possible.

I am also a constitutional-teacher and, independent of my Catholic faith, I think that the Constitution probably does not, in fact, require governments to outlaw or regulate abortion.  In any event, it *is* compatible, it seems to me, with Catholic teaching to have the view (as McCain does) that the Constitution permits (but does not require) We the People to legislate in accord with Catholic teaching, by regulating abortion (and banning capital punishment, and welcoming immigrants, etc., etc.).  And, even if one thought that McCain's view was not "fully compatible" with Catholic teaching, it is not clear why one should regard him as, in effect, in a "tie" with his rival, whose views on *this* question seem quite *in*-compatible with Catholic teaching.  Doug then says:

There is no single answer on the most effective manner to reduce abortion either. My experience, and that of others whom I greatly respect for their tireless efforts in parish work and with Project Rachel and Catholic pregnancy centers, suggest that Senator Obama’s emphasis on personal responsibility (conveying especially to young people the need to understand the maturity and commitment needed for sexual intimacy) is the course most likely to make a difference.

This statement surprises and disappoints.  One gets used to pro-abortion-rights advocates tossing around the charge that pro-lifers are single-mindedly focused on legal prohibitions (or only on the welfare of unborn children) rather than on in-the-trenches outreach to the needy and vulnerable but, as Doug knows full well, this is an unfair caricature.  *Of course* those of us who oppose abortion should engage in these "tireless efforts" and emphasize "personal responsibility".  It hardly follows that we shouldn't care about fixing (or, at least improving) the law, or should be indifferent to the prospect that, under President Obama and Speaker Pelosi, the laws of the Nation will almost certainly move dramatically in a pro-abortion-rights direction.  Finally, Doug writes:

it is my own conclusion that Senator Obama would be more open to these considerations since he is more dedicated toward reducing the partisanship of the past, has very responsibly and very consistently called upon our better natures, and has articulated -- long before he sought the presidency -- a genuine appreciation for the importance of faith in the public square.

Here, I suppose there's not much to say.  I do not believe the *evidence* supports the conclusion either that Sen. Obama is less "partisan[]" than Sen. McCain or that Sen. Obama appreciates more than does Sen. McCain "the importance of faith in the public square."  (I have, I realize, publicly endorsed McCain, and so might be suspect here, but it seems worth recalling the serious political risks that McCain has taken by *not* being "partisan" on many issues.)  To say this is not to say that Sen. Obama is a bad person or deny that there is something exhilarating about a youthful, African-American major-party candidate; it is just to doubt -- his charisma notwithstanding -- that he's meaningfully different, in his plans and policies and views, than other left-liberal American politicians.

In conclusion . . . re-read the preface, above.

Friends with Benefits

Yesterday's Boston Globe had a lengthy article on the push by some legal academics to have the law recognize friendships.  The reporter did a fair job, especially considering who she had to work with as the designated skeptic (me).  The article does not focus on the SSM debate, but this issue does underscore, in my view, the cost of excluding an entire segment of the population from the institution of marriage.  Gays and lesbians understandably will seek state support through non-marital relationships, which takes us closer to a world where individuals simply choose the category of relationship through which to receive state support, and the state is neutral as to the form of, and committments embodied in, those relationships.  It is difficult to imagine marriage maintaining its privileged status (as I believe it should) twenty years from now if a significant portion of the population is ineligible.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Casa Juan Diego, the Houston Catholic Worker, and the Zwick's

Michael Perry, your post did warm my heart at many levels:  Texana, the care of immigrants, radical orthodoxy, the Houston Catholic Worker, Casa Juan Diego, and much more.  For further reading, see this 11  year old article on the Zwick's and their Catholic Worker community.  The article is by my favorite author.  The Zwick's also have a book, The Catholic Worker Movement:  Intellectual and Spiritual Origins.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Michael Scaperlanda: This Will Warm Your Heart!

[From John Allen's report, in today's NCR:]

In a recent NCR cover story I described a phenomenon in Texas I called "Evangelical transfer," meaning ways in which the state's strong Evangelical Protestant ethos shapes the Catholic experience.  This week, I want to describe another "evangelical" face of Texas Catholicism, this time in the sense of lives lived in radical witness to the values of the Gospel.

Meet Mark and Louise Zwick, founders of the Casa Juan Diego on Houston's West side, a remarkable center of welcome and advocacy on behalf of the city's mushrooming immigrant population.

In Catholic circles around the world, Mark and Louise Zwick are probably best known for the Houston Catholic Worker, a newspaper and labor of love in which they blend deep Catholic piety with keen social analysis. The paper is legendary for tweaking American Catholic neoconservatives, and anyone sucked into their orbit; in 2004, for example, the Zwicks lampooned the work of a certain Rome correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, who, they felt, had been overly influenced by lunches in the Eternal City with prominent Catholic neo-cons. (In charity, they wrote at the time, they would refrain from saying that I was "out to lunch.")

On the streets of Houston, however, the Zwicks are famed not for literary production, but for love in action. One Wednesday morning in mid-February, Mark was showing me around the property when a mini-mob scene developed. A group of Hispanic men had clustered outside awaiting "Marco," and one by one they came forward to ask him, in polite Spanish, for various kinds of help. I watched as Mark found a jacket for one of the men to wear against the cold, a pair of shoes for another, and explained to a third how to get eyeglasses from Casa Juan Diego's free medical clinic.

Louise told me that this experience of living alongside the poorest of the poor, struggling daily to help meet their material and spiritual needs, fuels Casa Juan Diego's social advocacy.

[Read the rest of this remarkable, inspiring story, here.]

Newly Catholic Tony Blair ... and His "Faith Foundation"

[John Allen reports in today's NCR:]

In so many ways, Tony Blair is not your typical Anglican convert to the Catholic church.

For one thing, of course, Blair is the former British prime minister. Almost as atypical these days, however, is the fact that Blair does not belong to the traditionalist wing of Anglicanism, meaning Anglicans disenchanted with the ordination of women and homosexuals, the blessing of same-sex unions, and other liberalizing currents, and hence usually most likely to contemplate the "Roman option."

Instead, Blair espouses a theologically moderate, socially engaged Christianity. By the standards of British politics, Blair is a social moderate, and his largely permissive positions on abortion, birth control and embryonic stem cell research have drawn strong Catholic criticism over the years. (Some outraged English Catholics have gone so far as to charge that Blair should not have been received into communion with the church, at least until he recants.)

Last Friday, I attended a press conference at the Time-Warner Center in New York to present Blair's new "Faith Foundation," a global inter-faith coalition designed to mobilize religious leadership to achieve social good. Most immediately, the Faith Foundation intends to enlist religious believers in global efforts to eradicate malaria, estimated to kill one million people each year, primarily in the developing world, and the vast majority are children. A related aim is to combat extremism and terrorism carried out in the name of religious belief.

Interestingly, Blair's Faith Foundation counts a slew of prominent religious leaders among its advisors - Sir Jonathan Sacks, for example, Chief Rabbi of England, as well as Reverend Rick Warren, Senior Pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California. Yet there's not a single Catholic, though promotional materials say that Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor of England will join the advisory council after he steps down as Archbishop of Westminster.

To call Friday's press conference "high-profile" is an exercise in under-statement. It was hosted by CNN's Christiane Amanpour, and featured opening remarks from former U.S. President Bill Clinton, who said he had come to "wish my friend well." Richard Levin, President of Yale University, where Blair will be a visiting professor, was also on hand.

Eboo Patel, founder and director of the Interfaith Youth Core in Chicago and another advisor to Blair's Faith Foundation, provided the day's sound-bite.

"The worst mistake would be to think that the fault line of the 21st century runs between Christians and Muslims, or between theists and secularists," said Patel, a Muslim. "It's between pluralists and totalitarians."

That line was picked up by other speakers, so much so that it almost became an anthem - with Blair and his admirers clearly on the side of the pluralists.

Blair was careful to say that his foundation does not seek "to subsume different faiths into one universal faith of the lowest common denominator." Nevertheless, it seemed clear that Blair's Faith Foundation reflects what one might call a "center-left" religiosity, with emphasis on tolerance, dialogue, and cooperation in the pursuit of humanitarian objectives.

What future the foundation may have is tough to handicap. From a purely Catholic point of view, however, it's at least worth noting that the church's most high-profile recent convert also seems a natural spokesperson for a more "progressive" or "liberal" form of Catholicism, at a moment when that constituency appears to be, in many other ways, on the ropes.

Kmiec on same-sex marriage

Like Rob says, Doug Kmiec's recent post at Slate is quite ambiguous with respect to his position on same-sex marriage and the law.  Certainly, in the past, he has been a staunch opponent of moves to constitutionalize a right to same-sex marriage, and a supporter of an amendment to the Constitution to prevent such constitutionalization.  Consider, for example, this back-and-forth, with Larry Tribe, on the NewsHour a few years ago.  Kmiec said (among other things):

I respectfully disagree with my friend Professor Tribe. I think he's taken a definite position that he favors gay marriage and he's therefore sees it as an expansion of right. Others of us would see it as a disregard of created reality, of in fact the fact that states have preferred marriage, have given it a position of prominence because it does some very important things. It supplies new members to our community and it supplies a household that is the most important educator for our community. In this sense it's not a denial of right; it is an affirmation of what is important.

And, as he writes in this earlier Slate post, discussing the California decision, he wrote a brief in the case contending that "marriage is properly reserved to a man and a woman." 

Doug is someone who does his best, I think, to find points of agreement, and to blunt, to the extent possible, points of disagreement.  Maybe that's what was going on in the exchange with Dale Carpenter (who is also, in my experience, an admirably charitable discussant).

Still more on pro-life speech at York

With respect to our conversation about pro-life speech, secular universities, etc., a reader sent me this:

I would like to discuss a little bit more about the context of abortion in Canadian Universities.  First off, I am a university student (Laurentian) in Ontario, majoring in political science.  I am a convert to the Catholic Church, and my main interest (as my classmates will attest) has generally been in religion and politics. 

Regarding this whole situation, I think a few things should be included.  One, York is a public university, therefore, it is provided with plenty of public funding.  This primarily comes from the province, since education is constitutionally granted to the provinces.  While we do not have the First Amendment in Canada, we do have Charter protections that do substantially protect many of the same issues surrounding the First Amendment, but they can be limited by legislature when it is deemed appropriate.  While this may seem like that this university would be held to this standard, the courts have ruled that universities are not government institutions.  I am unsure if this a positive development or not. 

Relatedly, York is (I believe) the second largest university in Canada, with the University of Toronto the first,  having approxiamtely 45 000 students.  For the student body to even consider limiting discussion goes against the spirit of the university . . . . 

However, one of the more interesting developments is the response of the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS).  CFS comprises most of the universities in Canada, with fees costing over $10 a student from each member school.  They are a union that claims to represent the interests of students, yet, there is little consultation between them, various student governments, and students.  To take one example, Ontario recently had a electoral referrendum which asked if voters wished to switch to a mixed-member proportional system.  It was defeated.  However, CFS came out in favor of it and listed Laurentian as a supporter of their position.  Consequently, the school president had to write a letter to the school newspaper stating that they were not consulted at all.  This behavior typifies the CFS and how it treats its members.