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.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Easter and the Right to Life

This is by Bishop Jenky, C.S.C. (Peoria):

The most fundamental of all human rights is the right to life. All other imperatives of justice and mercy are derivative of the great truth that human beings are made in the image and likeness of God and that all human life is sacred from the moment of conception until natural death. Any cooperation with the grave sin of abortion is intrinsically evil and would certainly imperil one’s eternal salvation.

 

Although the clear majority of Americans oppose “abortion on demand” and especially the horrific act of murdering a child in the very process of being born, there is renewed effort today at the very highest levels of government to more widely enable and more generously fund the abortion of innocent human life in America and throughout the world. A dehumanized utilitarianism is now promoted as the only standard of scientific research. There are also serious legislative proposals to remove the rights of conscience for Catholic medical personnel and even to require Roman Catholic hospitals to perform abortions.

 

I am certain that the priests, deacons, religious and faithful of our Diocese are determined to vigorously oppose these efforts, even to the point of civil disobedience if that should ever become necessary. For practicing Catholics, loyalty to Jesus Christ must always supersede all other loyalties, including our ties to political parties, elected officials, schools, other institutions and organizations, even families and friends. In this Easter season as we celebrate the Lord’s victory over death, I wish to strongly reassert our Faith’s unshakable commitment to the Gospel of Life. As an ancient hymn of the Roman Church proclaims: Christ wins! Christ reigns! Christ commands!

 

— Most Reverend Daniel R. Jenky, C.S.C., Bishop of Peoria


States Slashing Social Programs for Vulnerable

A depressing story, here.

The Narrative Concluded (Part 4)

[Previous entries here, here, and here.]

Based on the evidence presented from experts from all over this country and abroad, it is clear that sexual orientation is not a predictor of a person’s ability to parent. Sexual orientation no more leads to psychiatric disorders, alcohol and substance abuse, relationship instability, a lower life expectancy or sexual disorders than race, gender, socioeconomic class or any other demographic characteristic. Qualities indicative of good parenting include attentiveness, involvement in a child’s educational development, the ability to sooth, offer comfort, advice and a secure base for a child, the provision of resources and maintaining a warm, harmonious environment. The most important factor in ensuring a well adjusted child is the quality of parenting.

Similarly, a child in need of love, safety and stability does not first consider the sexual orientation of his parent. More importantly, sexual orientation, solely, should not interfere with a child’s right to enjoy the accoutrements of a legal family. John and James, due to no fault of their own, were removed from an environment perilous to their physical, emotional and educational well being. Their biological parents relinquished them to the State, which in turn placed them into an environment that allowed them, eventually, to heal, and now flourish.

The quality and breadth of research available, as well as the results of the studies performed about gay parenting and children of gay parents, is robust and has provided the basis for a consensus in the field. Many well renowned, regarded and respected professionals have reduced methodologically sound longitudinal and cross-sectional studies into hundreds of reports. Some of the longitudinal studies have tracked children for six, ten and fourteen years. The starting ages of the children in the longitudinal studies has varied from birth, six to ten years old and followed them throughout childhood, adolescence and into adulthood. The studies and reports are published in many well respected peer reviewed journals including the Journal of Child Development, the Journal of Family Psychology, the Journal of Child Psychology, and the Journal of Child Psychiatry. Each of the studies and hundreds of reports also withstood the rigorous peer review process and were tested statistically, rationally and methodologically by seasoned professionals prior to publication.

In addition to the volume, the body of research is broad; comparing children raised by lesbian couples to children raised by married heterosexual couples; children raised by lesbian parents from birth to children raised by heterosexual married couples from birth; children raised by single homosexuals to children raised by single heterosexuals; and children adopted by homosexual parents to those raised by homosexual biological parents, to name a few. These reports and studies find that there are no differences in the parenting of homosexuals or the adjustment of their children. These conclusions have been accepted, adopted and ratified by the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatry Association, the American Pediatric Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Child Welfare League of America and the National Association of Social Workers. As a result, based on the robust nature of the evidence available in the field, this Court is satisfied that the issue is so far beyond dispute that it would be irrational to hold otherwise; the best interests of children are not preserved by prohibiting homosexual adoption.

The Guardian Ad Litem, the adoption agency and the assessing professionals agree that Petitioner and his domestic partner’s ability to parent is excellent. The quality of parenting, the level of bonding and attachment and the thriving relationship of the children with Petitioner, Roe and Tom Junior is uncontroverted by all parties to this litigation. This Court has presided over John and James case since its inception. This Court has presided over 58 hearings in their case and has had the opportunity to observe the children, Petitioner, and the growing relationship between them. It is clear to this Court that Petitioner is an exceptional parent to John and James who have healed in his care and are now thriving. Accordingly, Petitioner, John and James should be permitted to permanently and legally share the emotional, psychological, and familial bonds of parentage. Nevertheless, based on the law of this state, only a finding that the statute is unconstitutional will permit this Court to grant the petition.

[An excerpt from the conclusions of law:]

The equal protection argument of the Petitioner has been considered by other courts. In D.H.R.S. v. Cox, 627 So. 2d 1210 (Fla. 2d DCA 1993), two gay petitioners sought to adopt a child. Per Fla. Stat. §63.042(3), the application was denied. The men filed a state action to declare the statute unconstitutional on right of privacy, substantive due process, and equal protection grounds. Relying solely on copies of various law review articles, reports, editorials, and discussions appearing in magazines and journals submitted by the parties, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the petitioners as to the three constitutional arguments.

On appeal, the Second District Court of Appeal overruled the trial court’s findings holding there was virtually no evidence in the record to support a constitutional attack. The Florida Supreme Court agreed that the record below lacked factual evidence to determine whether the statute could sustain an attack as to its constitutional validity on equal protection grounds34 and remanded the matter to the trial court for further fact-finding. The petitioners, however, did not pursue the case.

With regard to the evidence presented in Cox, the lack of “major scientific articles,” the credentials and expertise of the authors, the quality and objectivity of the publishing journal, and the only “glimmers of answers” provided for by the available research caused pause for the reviewing court. Id. at 1213. The court further provided, “It may be that the legislature should revisit this issue in light of the research that has taken place in the last fifteen years, but we cannot say that the limited research reflected in this record compels the judiciary to override the legislature's reasoning.” Id. at 1220 (emphasis added). The research reflected in the record in this case is far from limited and compels a different result.

Section 63.042(3) was also challenged at the federal level in Lofton v. Secretary of Dept. of Children and Family Srvcs., 358 F. 3d 804 (11th Cir. 2004). There, homosexual foster parents attacked the constitutionality of the statute on various right to privacy theories and equal protection claims.35 The Lofton court, nearly five years ago, acknowledged the question to be determined was not whether the research and experts “support” the legislative prohibition, “but whether that evidence is so well established and so far beyond dispute that it would be irrational for the Florida legislature to believe that the interest of its children are best served by not permitting homosexual adoption.” Id. at 825. At that time, the Lofton court also reasoned, "Openly homosexual households represent a very recent phenomenon, and sufficient time has not yet passed to permit any scientific study of how children raised in those households fare as adults. Scientific attempts to study homosexual parenting in general are still in their nascent stages and so far have yielded inconclusive and conflicting results. Thus, it is hardly surprising that the question of the effects of homosexual parenting on childhood development is one on which even experts of good faith reasonably disagree. Given this state of affairs, it is not irrational for the Florida legislature to credit one side of the debate over the other." Id. at 826. As to the respective equal protection arguments, the failure to present any evidence in Cox 15 years ago and the weight of the evidence presented in Lofton nearly five year ago are both cited as the grounds for the courts’ inability to find the statute unconstitutional as violative of the equal protection of the U.S. and Florida Constitutions. However, today, based on the developments in the fields of social science, psychology, human sexuality, social work and medicine, the existence of additional studies, the re-analysis and peer review of prior studies, the endorsements by the major psychological, psychiatry, child welfare and social work associations, and the now, consensus based on widely accepted results of respected studies by qualified experts, the issue of whether Fla. Stat. §63.042(3) violates the equal protection of homosexuals and children adoptable by homosexuals, is again ripe for consideration.

[The court eventually conluded:]

This Court finds Fla. Stat. §63.042(3) violates the Petitioner and the Children’s equal protection rights guaranteed by Article I, § 2 of the Florida Constitution without satisfying a rational basis.

[The court's entire opinion is here.]

[Here is a picture of the petitioner and the two brothers:]

Has the Vatican really rejected Obama's proposed ambassadors?

The Washington Times reported that the Vatican had rejected ambassadors put forward by Obama and the story was cited by one of our contributors. Apparently not so. David Gibson at dot.commonweal says:"Much of this sounded like jumping on the Obama-as-unpopular-with-Catholics bandwagon. And now John Thavis at CNS has a pretty definitive debunking:'No proposals about the new ambassador of the United States to the Holy See have reached the Vatican, and therefore it is not true that they have been rejected. The rumors circulating about this topic are not reliable,' the spokesman, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, told Catholic News Service April 9.The spokesman’s comments echoed off-the-record remarks by informed diplomatic and Vatican sources in Rome, who said the reports appeared to be unfounded. 'It’s possible names have been circulated inside the U.S. administration, and perhaps rejected for some reason or other, but not because of any Vatican veto.'"

Friday, April 10, 2009

The Servant of the Servants of God

John Allen on the Obama/ND Issue

John Allen's comments on ND's invitation to Obama strike me as extremely sensible.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Iowa's Family Values

IF it weren’t for Iowa, my family may never have existed, and this gay, biracial New Yorker might never have been born.

In 1958, when my mother, who was white, and father, who was black, wanted to get married in Nebraska, it was illegal for them to wed. So they decided to go next door to Iowa, a state that was progressive enough to allow interracial marriage. My mom’s brother tried to have the Nebraska state police bar her from leaving the state so she couldn’t marry my dad, which was only the latest legal indignity she had endured. She had been arrested on my parents’ first date, accused of prostitution. (The conventional thought of the time being: Why else would a white woman be seen with a black man?)

On their wedding day, somehow, my parents made it out of Nebraska without getting arrested again, and were wed in Council Bluffs, Iowa, on March 1, 1958. This was five years before Nebraska would strike down its laws against interracial marriage, and almost a decade before the Supreme Court would outlaw miscegenation laws throughout the country in Loving v. Virginia.

When the good state of Iowa conferred the dignity of civic recognition on my parents’ relationship — a relationship some members of their own families thought was deviant and immoral, that the civil authorities of Nebraska had tried to destroy, and that even some of my mom’s college-educated friends believed would produce children striped like zebras — our family began. And by the time my father died, their interracial marriage was seen just as a marriage, and an admirable 45-year one at that.

That I almost cried last week upon reading that the Iowa Supreme Court overturned the state law banning same-sex marriage will therefore come as no surprise. I’m still struck by one thought: over the years, I’ve met so many gay émigrés who felt it was unsafe to be gay in so-called flyover country and fled for the East and West coasts. But as a gay man, I can’t marry in “liberal” New York, where I’m a resident, or in “liberal” California, where I was born, and very soon I will have that right in “conservative” Iowa.

Of course, the desire to define relational rights and responsibilities with a partner, to have access to the protection that this kind of commitment affords, is rather conservative. But it’s a conservative dream that should be offered to all Americans. Though it takes great courage for gays to marry in a handful of states now, one hopes that someday, throughout the nation, gay marriages, like my parents’ union, will just be seen as marriages.

It’s safe to say that neither the dramas of our family, nor its triumphs, could have been possible without the simultaneously radical and conservative occasion of my parents’ civil marriage in Iowa. And so when the time comes, I hope to be married at the City Hall in Council Bluffs, in the state that not only supports my civil rights now, but which supported my parents’ so many years ago.

[Steven W. Thrasher is a writer and media producer.]

[NYT op-ed, 4/8/09.]

Notre Dame as a symptom of a deeper malaise

Here's a very thoughtful commentary on the honors for Obama by a Notre Dame law student.

Studies on the Effects of Same-Sex Parentage on Children

With respect to the recent exchange of views on same-sex marriage and parenthood here, here, here and here, I agree that a through understanding of the facts should inform how the law is crafted, going forward.  The problem, however, to which Rob Vischer alludes, is that the effects of same-sex parentage on children are far from clear, a point made by MOJ friend and alumna Helen Alvare in her article The Turn Toward the Self in the Law of Marriage & Family: Same-Sex Marriage & Its Predecessors, 16 Stan. L. & Pol’y Rev. 135 (2005).  The article as a whole is well worth reading.  With respect to same-sex parenting, here’s an excerpt (from pp. 179-180, footnotes omitted):

 

 

“The most sound conclusion about gay parenting, reached not only by supporters of traditional marriage, but also by those of gay marriage, is that we do not know the ultimate effects on children of long-term rearing in gay couple households, with or without marriage, with a few possible exceptions. One set of researchers concluded that daughters raised by lesbians will likely have more sexual partners before adulthood and that males and females reared by lesbians are more likely to experiment with or consider homosexuality themselves.  As to additional effects of gay marriage on children, the research is quite incomplete.

 

 

“The most thorough reviews of existing studies on gay parenting are by Steven Nock, an eminent sociology professor at the University of Virginia (submitted as an affidavit in the Ontario, Canada, same-sex marriage case and by two University of Chicago sociologists, Robert Lerner and Althea Nagai.  Nock's study states: 'Let me begin by noting that the central question, that is, what effect does gay and lesbian marriage have on children in such unions, cannot be answered at the moment.'  He proceeds to assert that '[a]ll of the articles [about the well-being of children raised in gay households] I reviewed contained at least one fatal flaw of design or execution. Not a single one was conducted according to generally accepted standards of scientific research.'

 

  

“Similarly, Professors Lerner and Nagai have also called into serious question the relatively brief and sanguine conclusions of the courts about the research presented to them on gay parenting. Professors Lerner and Nagai reviewed forty-nine existing studies supporting the ‘no difference’ theory between heterosexual and homosexual parenting and found the following: recurring methodological flaws; failure to use testable hypotheses; lack of control methods; unrepresentative study populations; self-selected sample groups; and use of negative hypotheses (for example, the ‘no difference’ hypotheses) which are easier to prove than positive hypotheses.

  

 

“Two

University

of

Michigan

researchers sympathetic to gay marriage also published a revealing look at existing favorable studies in 2001. Professors Judith Stacey and Timothy Biblarz critiqued twenty-one studies claiming positive outcomes for gay parenting, concluding that ‘there are no studies of child development based on random, representative samples’ of same-sex households.  Occasionally, one finds a study that acknowledges its own flaws, but more often, as reported by Lerner and Nagai, the ‘no difference’ result is reported without nuance.”

 

Real-World Narrative Con't (Part 3)

[Petitioner presented as one of his expert witnesses] Dr . Michael Lamb, Professor of Psychology at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England. Dr. Lamb spent 17 years as a senior research scientist at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (part of the National Institute of Health) before moving to England in 2004 to serve as the head of the Department of Psychology and head of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Cambridge. One area of Dr. Lamb’s 30 years of research focuses on the factors relating to children’s development and adjustment. Dr. Lamb was qualified as an expert witness in psychology with a specialization in the development and adjustment of children, including children of gay and lesbian parents. Dr. Lamb stated that most families, today, are not traditional families. According to Dr. Lamb, there are three important factors that are predictors of healthy adjustment for children. One well recognized predictor of healthy adjustment is a child’s relationship with his parents: a child is more likely to be well adjusted if he has a warm, harmonious relationship with committed, involved, sensitive parents. The second predictor is the relationship between the adults in the child’s life. Children are more likely to be adjusted when the relationship between the parents is harmonious and positive. The third widely recognized predictor of adjustment is the resources available to a child. Children tend to adjust and better when they have adequate resources available and children who grow up in less well resourced homes are more likely to have issues with maladjustment. Providing additional insight into the development of the field in this area, Dr. Lamb points out that researchers once believed that traditional families provided the best environment for children. As the research developed, however, the notion was proven to be flawed, because the quality of the parenting itself is more important.

The witness testified that based on his 30 years of research and experience in the field, he can say with certainty that children raised by homosexual parents do not suffer an increased risk of behavioral problems, psychological problems, academic development, gender identity, sexual identity, maladjustment, or interpersonal relationship development.9  [fn 9:  As also supported by studies included in and performed by the Journal of Child Development, Child Psychology, Journal of Family Psychology, Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry; Professor Susan Golombok, Professor Shana Patterson, Professor Cum Ta Rey Chan; Trial transcript, Oct. 2, 2008, p. 57 l. 19 – p. 62 l. 21.]

Dr. Lamb’s work is consistent with other studies of same sex parents indicating their children are not more likely to be maladjusted. As such, pursuant to the witness’ testimony the assumption that children raised by gay parents are harmed is not a reliable finding. In fact, it is contrary to the consensus in the field. Although much of the research in this area compares children raised from birth by lesbian couples to children raised from birth by heterosexual couples, the witness believes the research would prove consistent if the samples included children raised by homosexual fathers. Explaining the literature to the contrary,11 Dr. Lamb offers that such research is unreliable, not methodologically sound, unpublished or published in non-peer review publications, and over-emphasizes non-statistical differences, among other methodological flaws. Additionally, the witness states that longitudinal studies reveal the same results as cross-sectional studies. Also, as to the contention that research need be conducted of adoptive children raised by homosexual parents versus children raised by biological homosexual parents, Dr. Lamb rejects the idea stating that the predictors in adoptive and biological gay parenting are not different. Moreover, although adoptive children have an additional factor to consider (their prior background), this does not relate to the sexual orientation of their caregiver.  [fn 11:  R. Lerner and A.K. Nagai, No Basis: What the Studies Don’t Tell Us About Same-Sex Parenting, Marriage Law Prject (Jan. 2001) (reviewing 49 studies on same-sex parenting and finding recurring methodological flaws); W. Schumm, Re-examination of Evidence Concerning Child Development, reported in F. Tasker and S. Golombok’s 1997 Growing Up In a Lesbian Family; K. Cameron & P. Cameron, Homosexual Parents, 31 Adolescence 757, 770-774 (1996) (P. Cameron was censured and ousted by the APA for misreporting results about homosexual parenting); J. Stacy & T. Biblarz, How does the Sexual Orientation of Parents Matter, 66 Am Soc. Rev. 159, 166 (2001) (although cited by Lofton as opposing homosexual parenting, Stacy and Biblarz concluded, “Because every relevant study to date shows the parental sexual orientation per say has no measurable effect on the quality of parent/child relationships, or on children’s mental health and social adjustment, there is no evidentiary basis for considering parental sexual orientation in decisions about children’s best interest”); Zatieros Zaranticos, Children in Three Contexts, Family, Education, and Social Development (Zaranticos is not a psychologist. The article was not published in a peer reviewed journal, but an Australian magazine. According to critics, the study fails to prove maladjustment of children raised by homosexual parents because of the failure to account for the divorce or separation many of the children had recently experienced and was likely the cause for their maladjustment.)]

Relating to sexual activity and/or orientation of children of homosexual parents one study revealed that female children raised by lesbians were more sexually active than males raised by lesbians. Dr. Lamb interjects that such results reveal only that children raised by lesbians are less strictly tied to sexual roles and rigid applications of sex roles. Dr. Lamb emphasizes that there was no difference in the age the children raised by lesbians began engaging in sex versus those raised by heterosexuals. Moreover, according to the witness, there was no significant difference between the sexual orientation of children with lesbian parents and those with heterosexual parents. Although children raised by lesbian mothers expressed openness to considering same sex attraction, Dr. Lamb explains that children of lesbian mothers tended to believe their parent would be more tolerant of a same sex relationship. Dr. Lamb states the import of the research revealed by the study is not that gay parents rear gay children, but more a lesson in promoting tolerance.

With regard to social relationships and peer adjustments, Dr. Lamb reports that children raised by gay parents develop social relationships the same as those raised by heterosexual parents. The research shows that children of gay parents are not ostracized and do not experience discrimination any more than children of heterosexual parents. According to the witness, children have always and will continue to tease and bully their peers about their parent’s appearance, employment, ethnic background, parenting style, or sexual orientation. A child that is teased views one reason no less hurtful than another. Therefore, Dr. Lamb concludes that the exclusion of homosexuals from adoption does not shield a child from being teased by his/her peers.

Lastly, Dr. Lamb opined that the assumption that children need a mother and a father in order to be well adjusted is outdated and not supported by the research. According to the witness, there is no optimal gender combination of parents; neither men nor women have a greater ability to parent. Additionally, today, two-parent households are less attached to static roles than in the past. Moreover, there is a well established and generally accepted consensus in the field that children do not need a parent of each gender to adjust healthily. The witness opines that the exclusion of homosexuals as adoptive parents is not rationally related to child adjustment. Rather, the witness believes the exclusion hurts children by reducing the number of capable and appropriate parents available and willing to adopt.

[Final installment, tomorrow.]