Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Speaking of the nature of "marriage", ...
... this looks interesting:
"Marriage Equality? First, Justify Marriage (If You Can)"
Drexel Law Review, Vol. 1, No. 2, 2009Widener Law School Legal Studies Research Paper No. 09-27
JOHN G. CULHANE, Widener University
- Delaware Campus
Email: [email protected]
With recent positive developments in Connecticut, Vermont, Iowa, and New
York, mixed success in California, and setbacks in Arizona and Florida, the
marriage equality movement remains in the center of political, legal, and social
debate in the United States. Proponents have argued that granting the right to
marry to same-sex couples is compelled as a matter of simple fairness and
equality, while opponents have continued to make a host of related - but
unconvincing - arguments about the intrinsic meaning of marriage and how this
will be lost or compromised if marriage equality takes hold. But below this
turbulent surface, courts called upon to solve real problems confronting
same-sex couples have expressly or impliedly recognized that a much deeper
problem exists: the vast and often unexamined privileging of marriage over other
forms of family and other kinds of relationships. Legal scholars, too, have
questioned marriage - sometimes by focusing on the privileges that attach to it,
but sometimes more broadly, by questioning the status itself. These unavoidable
questions reveal that the controversy over same-sex marriage is but the most
visible part of a much larger set of issues about equality and social justice.
What public health and policy goals are we trying to further with laws
recognizing and subsidizing marriage? How do the signals sent by privileging
marriage advance or compromise those goals? Is there a continued justification
for marriage, and, if so, ought we consider changing its prerogatives in ways
that will further the public good? What might those ways be, and how will (or
could) we know whether we have succeeded? This brief Article raises and explores
these questions, and asks whether and to what extent the current privileging of
marriage is (or is not) justified.
[Downloadable here.]
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2009/10/speaking-of-the-nature-of-marriage-.html