Ann Bartow from South Carolina to Pace

From Pace Law School’s press release:

Pace Law School is strengthening its offerings in intellectual property by adding to its teaching ranks Professor Ann Bartow, a leading intellectual property scholar, Dean Michelle S. Simon announced.

“Ann Bartow is a remarkably productive and creative scholar who is one of the leading scholarly voices in the intellectual property field. Ann is a top-caliber teacher, writer and thinker,” said Dean Simon. “She fearlessly engages at points of intersection between and among intellectual property laws and public policy concerns, privacy and technology law, and feminist legal theory. Her work pushes forward the public conversation about the role and function of law in society. We are so thrilled to welcome her to our community.”

Professor Bartow is being appointed with tenure from the University of South Carolina School of Law, where she teaches Intellectual Property Survey Law, Copyright Law, Trademarks and Unfair Competition Law, Patent Law and Cyberspace Law. Professor Bartow is a graduate of Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania Law School.

Pending university approval, the appointment is effective May 1.

“Ann Bartow is in the top echelon of IP scholars,” said Professor Horace Anderson, who also teaches and writes in the IP area. “Every day, IP lawyers must confront changes in law and technology. Ann Bartow’s immense talents will help us to continue to provide the best legal education for our students.”

Welcome, welcome, Ann!  Congratulations!

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in Chutes and Ladders | 4 Comments

Does a Faculty Member’s Gender Matter? When Overt Discrimination Isn’t the Problem (Anymore)

There’s a new study out of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst that says it does, at least in science and engineeering.  Here’s how an article over at Slate breaks it down:

[Jane Stout, Nilanjana Dasgupta, Matthew Hunsinger, and Melissa A. McManus, ] psychologists at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst…evaluated how undergraduates performed when they had male or female math professors.

They measured, for instance, how often each student responded to questions posed by professors to the classroom as a whole. At the start of the semester, 11 percent of the female students attempted to answer questions posed to the entire class when the professor was male, and 7 percent of the female students attempted to answer questions posed to the entire class when the professor was female. By the end of the semester, the number of female students who attempted to answer questions posed by a male professor had not changed significantly: Only 7 percent of the women tried to answer such questions. But when classes were taught by a woman, the percentage of female students who attempted to answer questions by the semester’s end rose to 46.

The researchers also measured how often students approached professors for help after class. Around 12 percent of the female students approached both male and female professors for help at the start of the semester. The number of female students approaching female professors was 14 percent at the end of the semester. But the number of female students asking for help from a male professor dropped to zero.

Finally, when Stout and Dasgupta evaluated how much the students identified with mathematics, they found that women ended up with less confidence in their mathematical abilities when their teachers were men rather than women. This happened even when women outperformed men on actual tests of math performance.

Think about that. On objective measures of math performance, these women were outscoring men. But their identification with mathematics was not tied to their interest, determination, or talent. It was connected to whether their teacher was a woman or a man.

These experiments suggest that subtle and unconscious factors skew the “free choices” we make. The career choices of men and women are affected far more by discrimination than by any innate differences between men and women. But it is not the kind of discrimination we usually talk about. We ought to assume that male math professors at the University of Massachusetts were just as committed to teaching young women as they were to teaching young men. And those professors were just as talented as their female counterparts. (The professors and students were not told the purpose of the experiment beforehand, so the female professors and female students couldn’t have entered into some kind of pact to boost test scores.)

The traditional model of discrimination, in which people deliberately tip the scales in favor of one group over another, still applies in some cases. There are undoubtedly sexist professors. But overt sexism does not explain these findings. In fact, that model of discrimination might be an obstacle to overcoming the real challenge. * * *

It is true that fewer women than men break into science and engineering careers today because they do not choose such careers. What isn’t true is that those choices are truly “free.”

Read the full Slate article here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Liz Glazer on “Sexual Reorientation”

Yesterday I had the good fortunate to hear an engaging talk by Feminist Law Prof Liz Glazer (Hofstra).  She was invited by the student LAMBDA organization in connection with our school’s Spotlight on Diversity Week, held annually each year.  Here is the event description:

LAMBDA, Pace Law’s LBGT student organization, is sponsoring a “Bisexuality” discussion on campus about Bisexuality and the law. The bisexual anomaly, where bisexuals are not fully accepted into the gay community and not understood in the straight community, is a contemporary topic that will draw the attention from both the straight and LGBT communities on campus. In addition to these so called societal mores of bisexuality, the community is wholly absent from legal protections as “bisexuals” do not fit within the “gay” or “straight” legal categories created in the law.

Her talk was all that and much more.  Liz Glazer is clearly a gifted teacher.  She had a wonderful rapport with the students and had an audience of students and faculty completely engaged with the topic.  Liz’s current project is “Sexual Reorientation.”  Here is the abstract from SSRN:

Ten years ago, Kenji Yoshino wrote about the “epistemic contract of bisexual erasure,” the tacit agreement between both homosexuals and heterosexuals to erase bisexuals. While the tenth anniversary of the publication of Yoshino’s article is reason enough to revisit the topic of bisexual erasure, the recent storm of same-sex marriage litigation presents an even more pressing reason to revisit the topic.

Lately, it seems more homosexuals than heterosexuals are erasing bisexuals, and more overtly than at the time Yoshino identified the phenomenon of bisexual erasure. Because the fight for same-sex marriage recognition is a fight to fit into the guarded category of marriage, members of same-sex relationships and their advocates have an interest in fitting into a stable sexual orientation category, which bisexuality is not. This Article, at the very least, hopes to make the bisexual slightly less invisible from legal scholarship at a time when the threat of bisexuality, and the erasure of bisexuals, seem to have intensified. More ambitiously, this Article introduces terminology that serves as a first step toward making bisexuals – along with other individuals along the continuum of sexual orientation who are even more invisible than bisexuals – visible.

This new terminology distinguishes between an individual’s “general orientation” and an individual’s “specific orientation.” An individual’s general orientation is the sex toward which the individual is attracted as a general matter. An individual’s specific orientation is the sex of the individual’s chosen partner. In many cases the two orientations are identical, but for bisexuals who partner with only one person the two orientations necessarily differ. While introducing new words will not solve the problem of bisexual invisibility, it might allow those who have struggled with asserting their bisexual orientations – those who were in a relationship with a member of the opposite sex and later wished to partner with a member of the same sex (or vice-versa) – to do so without having to recant their previous relationships. This terminology describes an individual’s sexual orientation with reference to her status as well as her conduct. It also describes her sexual orientation individually as well as relationally. Moreover, in addition to ameliorating the problem of bisexual invisibility, distinguishing between individuals’ specific and general orientations will help to debunk commonly believed myths about bisexuals, bridge the gap between diametrically opposed sides of the stalemated same-sex marriage debate, and clarify the purpose of the LGBT rights movement by broadening the concept of sexual orientation.

A draft of the working paper is available here.  This is a project to watch!

-Bridget Crawford

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Chandra on “Surrogacy and India”

Mr. Smith Chandra, a student at the National Academy of Legal Studies and Research University in Hyerabad, India has posted to SSRN his working paper Surrogacy and India.  Here is the abstract:

The Law Commission of India has submitted the 228th Report on “Need for Legislation to Regulate Assisted Reproductive Technology Clinics as Well as Rights and Obligations of Parties to a Surrogacy.”

There has been a major change in Indian surrogacy laws. India is now the only country in the world to legalise commercial surrogacy. Unlike in other countries, including the UK, USA and France, in India the surrogacy agreements between the two parties will be legally enforceable. The new law will protect all parties – the genetic parents, surrogate mother and the child.

The new Assisted Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Bill & Rules, 2008, states that the surrogate mother can receive monetary compensation for carrying the child in addition to health-care and treatment expenses during pregnancy. But the surrogate mother has to relinquish all parental rights over the child once the amount is transferred and birth certificates will be in the name of genetic parents. The age-limit for a surrogate mother is between 21-45 years. Single parents can also have children using a surrogate mother.

This article discusses various aspect regarding surrogacy and its constitutional validity in India. It questions whether right to reproduction is a constitutional right or not. The article also endeavors to draw a comparison between various nations regarding their policy and take on surrogacy.

The full paper is available here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Fatal Charmers

Kevin Nance investigates the disappearance of the femme fatale from our screens. “For all her lying,” he says, “the femme fatale was a truth-teller, a bad woman whose real crime was to introduce a man to his own innate badness. And then she was gone. By the early 1950s, the femme fatale all but disappeared from the big screen, displaced by the politely swooning housewives of Douglas Sirk and, later, empowered ass-kickers like Faye Dunaway in Bonnie and Clyde.” Read more of his essay “Cherchez la femme fatale” here at the blog Obit.

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(Non)Consenting Adults: Illinois Opinion Finds Adultery Is Serious Provocation, Sexual Assault Is Not

I’m currently teaching 2nd degree murder in my Criminal Law class and was looking for a good Illinois case on the subject. In Illinois, a defendant who could otherwise be convicted of 1st degree murder can be convicted of 2nd degree murder if, inter alia, “at the time of the killing he or she is acting under a sudden and intense passion resulting from serious provocation by the individual killed or another whom the offender endeavors to kill, but he or she negligently or accidentally causes the death of the individual killed.” Illinois courts have found that only four categories of acts qualify as serious provocation under Illinois law: “substantial physical injury or assault, mutual quarrel or combat, illegal arrest, and adultery with the offender’s spouse.”

Illinois courts have been reluctant to find that any other acts qualify as serious provocation. I think that this approach is a bit formalistic, but I can understand why these courts have wanted to limit the number of circumstances in which defendants can claim serious provocation. But I cannot understand the logic of one of the cases I came across: People v. Yarbrough, 645 N.E.2d 423 (Ill.App. 1 Dist. 1994). In Yarbrough, a boyfriend learned that the victim allegedly raped his girlfriend, so he shot and killed him. Yarbrough claimed that at most he should be found guilty of second degree murder because he was adequately provoked. According to Yarbrough, his case was analogous to a case in which a defendant kills his wife after catching her committing adultery.

The court disagreed, concluding that

To date, no Illinois court has extended the adultery category beyond a legal marriage to marital-type relationships.

In any event, the physical act involved in this case is criminal sexual assault…, not adultery….We believe that the public policy of this State dictates that the appropriate response to sexual assault is to seek redress through the criminal justice system.

So, what’s the implication here? That the public policy of Illinois dictates that the appropriate response to discovering your spouse committing an act of adultery is to murder him or her?

-Colin Miller

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Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal and Military Chaplains

This morning’s Pittsburgh Post-Gazette has a story about the fears expressed by some conservative military chaplains about the effects on them of the pending repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.

The story is part of the meme of victimizing the oppressor. From the story:

The military’s bottom line is that no chaplain will be penalized for teaching that gay sex is sinful.

“Service members must not be required to change their personal views and religious beliefs,” said the Support Plan for Implementation of the repeal. “They must, however, continue to respect and co-exist with others who may hold different views and beliefs.”

The plan tells trainers for the repeal to “use language that is respectful of all perspectives. … This includes gay and lesbian individuals as well as people of faith who have moral concerns with repeal, all of whom can be stereotyped in a negative way.”

Nevertheless, the Pray in Jesus Name Project, which supports conservative chaplains, has called the Pentagon guidelines the “plan to purge Christians” from chaplaincy.

“Now the Obama Administration is officially on record pressuring chaplains to quit the service if they cannot ‘reconcile’ with homosexual sin that violates their Christian conscience,” said a petition on its website.

The “purge” is a clause that says chaplains have an option to leave the military that isn’t open to others who object to serving with gay troops. They can ask their faith group to withdraw its endorsement, which would trigger a discharge.

In a pluralistic society–and especially one with a constitutional amendment guaranteeing the free exercise of religion–religious beliefs must be “respected.” The verb “to respect” has a multiplicity of meanings. Here, I use it not in the sense of “holding in esteem or honor” but in the sense of “refraining from intruding upon” the religious beliefs of others.

But what never ceases to amaze me–and what is fully on display in this article–is how, for the truly reactionary, it is never enough to respect religious belief in this way–even when those religious beliefs are being brought out of the place of worship and into the secular arena (whether that be counseling troops in the military or the state‘s recognition of relationship through marriage), where others may embrace differing beliefs or no religious beliefs at all. Instead, they ask for religious beliefs to be respected in the former sense of the word (i.e., of holding them in esteem or honor), asking, in essence, that their beliefs be imposed on others in everyday, nonreligious life–notwithstanding the same constitutional amendment’s admonition that the “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” In the case of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, we are told that, to do otherwise, is to oppress conservatives (and especially conservative Christians) and purge them from the military.

Once again, the victimizer turns himself/herself into a victim to stymie change and prevent the reversal of a long history of antigay discrimination. Quite unfortunately, this is nothing new, but it still bears being called out for what it is whenever we see it.

-Tony Infanti

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NYT Editorial: “The War on Women”

From today’s New York Times, this editorial, entitled The War on Women:

Republicans in the House of Representatives are mounting an assault on women’s health and freedom that would deny millions of women access to affordable contraception and life-saving cancer screenings and cut nutritional support for millions of newborn babies in struggling families. And this is just the beginning.

The budget bill pushed through the House last Saturday included the defunding of Planned Parenthood and myriad other cuts detrimental to women. ***

The egregious cuts in the House resolution include the elimination of support for Title X, the federal family planning program for low-income women that provides birth control, breast and cervical cancer screenings, and testing for H.I.V. and other sexually transmitted diseases. ***

Beyond the familiar terrain of abortion or even contraception, House Republicans would inflict harm on low-income women trying to have children or who are already mothers.

Their continuing resolution would cut by 10 percent the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, better known as WIC, which serves 9.6 million low-income women, new mothers, and infants each month, and has been linked in studies to higher birth weight and lower infant mortality.

The G.O.P. bill also slices $50 million from the block grant supporting programs providing prenatal health care to 2.5 million low-income women and health care to 31 million children annually. President Obama’s budget plan for next year calls for a much more modest cut.

These are treacherous times for women’s reproductive rights and access to essential health care. House Republicans mistakenly believe they have a mandate to drastically scale back both even as abortion warfare is accelerating in the states. To stop them, President Obama’s firm leadership will be crucial. So will the rising voices of alarmed Americans.

The full editorial is available here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Googlebombing Links “Murder” and Wikipedia Entry For Abortion

Via Reddit.

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Posted in Feminism and Technology, Reproductive Rights | 1 Comment

NY Appellate Court Upholds Distribution of Decedent’s Estate to Same-Sex Spouse

An appellate court in New York has upheld the decision of New York County Surrogate Kristen Booth Glen (formerly of CUNY Law) to recognize a decedent’s same-sex marriage for estate administration purposes.  Specifically, Surrogate Glen had permitted probate of the decedent’s will without giving notice to the decedent’s siblings.

In this case, H. Kenneth Ranftle v. Craig Leiby,the decedent was survived by his spouse, whom he had married legally in Canada, as well as his siblings.  Under his will, the decedent made bequests to three brothers and a goddaughter.  He left the remainder to his spouse.

Ordinarily in New York, the people entitled to notice of probate (and those with standing to contest a will) are those named in will as well as the decedent’s intestate heirs.  If a decedent is survived by a spouse, but no parents and no descendants, then the only people entitled to notice of probate are those named in the will and the decedent’s surviving spouse.  If the decedent has no spouse, no descendants and no parents who survive, then the decedent’s siblings are entitled to receive notice of probate.

The question in this case, then, was whether the decedent was survived by a “spouse” for purposes of New York law.  The New York County Surrogate thought so, and the Appellate Division affirmed.  The court reasoned that principles of comity required New York to recognize the decedent’s same-sex Canadian marriage.  Therefore, the decedent’s was survived by his spouse, and only those named in the will (including some of his siblings, but not all of them) and the decedent’s spouse were entitled to notice of probate.

It will be interesting to see whether opponents of same-sex marriage attempt to construe the court’s holding very narrowly — arguing that it should be limited only to the procedural question of who is entitled to notice of probate.  Proponents of same-sex marriage will emphasize the court’s broad statements about comity.

The full text of the decision in the case is here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Full Text Opinion in H. Kenneth Ranftle v. Craig Leiby

The full text of the decision of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Appellate Division, First Department appears after the fold.

Continue reading

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Janell Hobson on Hip-Hop Feminism

Over at the Ms. Magazine blog, Janell Hobson (Women’s Studies, SUNY) writes Can’t Stop the Women of Hip-Hop:

[N]ow that mainstream hip-hop has become corporate, such women have been mostly silenced (most infamously when Sarah Jones was fined in 2001 by the FCC for her “Your Revolution“ dis poem) or marginalized to make way for the video dancers, models and sex workers employed to fuel the hip-hop pornography economy. This is not to say that the women who participate in hip-hop through limited and sexualized roles–whether as video girls or sexually objectified emcees–are not still finding creative ways to assert gender and sexual politics or to push back against mainstream and corporate limitations. Even while Nicki Minaj plays to the dominant gaze, she renegotiates the space allotted her in popular hip-hop. And there’s still room for a Mama’s Hip Hop Kitchen, which puts community activism and local feminism first, or a Janelle Monae, who quietly lurks just below the radar with her androgynous appearance and throwback sounds that signify on women’s funky remix abilities.

Read her full post here.

For folks interested in the history of women in music and hip-hop (and popular) culture generally, Hobson’s post is recommended.  And if you like music, it’s a nice trip down that memory lane, too.

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in Feminism and Culture, Race and Racism | 1 Comment

Law Professors Support Decimalizing Marijuana

CNBC has a story and slide show “Marijuana by the Numbers,” explaining that if legal in the United States, marijuana would be a $40 billion industry. See here.

I did chuckle when I saw the slide above, describing the history of marijuana decriminalization in the State of Oregon.  Oregon’s history with the metric system is another matter, I presume.

-Bridget Crawford

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Batter Up! Justine Siegal Throws Four-Seam Fast Balls in Batting Practice for the Indians

The New York Times reported yesterday (here) on 36 year-old Justine Siegal’s debut throwing batting practice for the Cleveland Indians during spring training in Arizona.

Justine Siegal felt a chill of excitement when she saw her dark blue Cleveland Indians jersey. She changed in the umpires’ locker room and emerged with a confident gait, her blond pigtails shining in the Arizona morning sun. Siegal, 36, smiled as she prepared for her debut Monday, her 13-year-old daughter, Jasmine, following close by her side.

A longtime advocate for girls playing baseball, Siegal explained her fantasy campaign. “I had a dream and felt like giving it a go,” she said. “I see this as more of a mental exercise than a physical one.” * * *

“It was wonderful to have her pitch for us because she’s from Cleveland,” Acta said. “I believe her dad and grandfather still have season tickets. It’s multigenerational. For her to do this with our ball club was very special.”

Raised in Cleveland, where she began playing baseball at 5, a young Siegal would lie in bed at night dreaming of a career in professional baseball, and of one day taking the field as a member of the Indians.

“It wasn’t until I was 15 when I knew it wasn’t going to happen,” she said.

Her quest to throw batting practice began last November when she sent written requests to general managers of major league clubs. Only one bothered to answer. “It was a lovely letter supporting me, but also saying no,” Siegal said.

She didn’t stop there. In December, Siegal traveled to the winter meetings in Florida and tracked down general managers to make her pitch in person. * * *

On Monday, watching her mother throw four-seam fastballs to the hitters, Jasmine Siegal said: “This is so cool. She’s showing that no matter what, you can achieve your goals.”

On the sleeve of Justine Siegal’s Indians jersey was a memorial patch in tribute to 9-year-old Christina Taylor Green, the youngest person killed in the Jan. 8 mass shooting in Tucson. Green, a granddaughter of the longtime baseball executive Dallas Green, had been the only girl on her Little League team.

“This is a small way to honor her memory,” Siegal said. “She represents why I’m doing this. Christina is a symbol of all those girls who want to play baseball.”

About 13 years ago, Siegal started what is now called Baseball for All, an organization that promotes baseball globally, with the focus on female participation. The organization started as a four-team all-women’s baseball league in Cleveland.

Read the full story here.

To all the girls playing in Little Leagues across the country, keep pitching!

-Bridget Crawford

photo credit: http://weol.northcoastnow.com

 

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Posted in Feminism and Sports | 1 Comment

DOMA and Binational Couples

Among the many issues raised by the decision yesterday by the Obama administration to stop defending Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act are those related to the immigration consequences for binational LGBT couples. Does this mean that DHS will start adjudicating family based petitions filed by binational same sex couples?

Currently under DOMA same-sex relationships are not recognized by DHS. United States Citizens and Legal permanent residents can not sponsor their same-sex partners within the family based petition categories. This is true even if the couple married in a country or a state that recognizes same sex marriages and civil unions. Consequently binational families have been forced to live in different countries or find limited alternative ways to enter and remain in the United States.

The Board of Immigration Appeals has been supportive of marriage-based cases involving transgender individuals, but not same sex couples. The BIA has pointed out in those cases that the marriage relationship is consistent with federal law because the couples were of “opposite sexes.” In re Lovo-Lara, 23 I&N Dec. 746 (BIA 2005). There the BIA stated that:

There is also nothing in the legislative history [of DOMA] to indicate that, other than in the limited area of same-sex marriages, Congress sought to overrule our long-standing case law holding that there is no Federal definition of marriage and that the validity of a particular marriage is determined by the law of the State where the marriage was celebrated. While we recognize, of course, that the ultimate issue of the validity of a marriage for immigration purposes is one of Federal law, that law has, from the inception of our nation, recognized that the regulation of marriage is almost exclusively a State matter.

The Board of Immigration Appeals is part of the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR). As an office within the Department of Justice, EOIR is headed by a Director who reports directly to the Deputy Attorney General. Under 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(h)(1)(i) (2008) the Attorney General can review the decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals. Does this means that the next time a same sex married couple files an appeal before the BIA, the attorney general will request the case to be referred to him in order to clarify the unconstitutionality of Article 3 of DOMA? Is any instruction regarding this matter to be included in the Immigration Judges Bench Book?

According to an analysis of the 2000 U.S. census performed by the The Williams Project on Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy UCLA School of Law there were more than 35,000 binational same-sex couples in the country. At this point, same-sex binational couples who want to remain together in the United States have to rely on work or student visas, or seek other legal loopholes.

Will the Administration instruct the Department of Homeland Security to amend the Field Adjudicators Manual so that  adjudicating officers evaluate  each same sex marriage family petitions according to its validity in the country or state of its celebration,  absent constitutionally sound public policy concerns?  Or even better. Will the Administration instruct USCIS to ignore state legislation against same sex marriage as it  may be unconstitutional, violating the Equal Protection Clause and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution?

On October 2010  an internal memo of DHS entitled Administrative Alternatives  to Comprehensive Immigration Reform was made public.  The draft memo’s stated purpose was to “offer administrative relief options to promote family unity, foster economic growth, achieve significant process improvements and reduce the threat of removal for certain individuals present in the United States without authorization.”

Any comprehensive immigration has to include a pathway to legalization and also family unity.  Does this means that this Administration is going to propose alternatives  to the LGBT community that   define the concept of family in a way that leaves no doubt  that same-sex couples and their binational relationships are part of families?

These are but a few of the questions raised by the Administration´s courageous decision to expose the unconstitutionality of DOMA.    It must be noted however that even the repeal of DOMA  would not result in a clear, uniform rule recognizing all same-sex marriages under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

The decision announced yesterday by the Attorney General is a step in the right direction,  however  given that the the United States immigration law  has a long history of overt discrimination against homosexual immigrants  I am not so optimistic that  we will see the same courage reach the immigration arena,  at least not so soon.  I hope I am wrong. In the meantime  the  Uniting American Families Act might be a good place to start.

-Sheila I. Velez Martinez

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Posted in Feminism and Families, Immigration, LGBT Rights | 1 Comment

Where are the Women? Not Too Often Among Magazine Authors, Either

VIDA: Women in Literary Arts has published The Count 2010, its annual tally of authors whose work appeared (or was reviewed) in magazines like the Atlantic, Granta, Harpers, London Review of Books, the New Yorker, the NY Times Book Review, the New York Review of Books and others.  The results?  Not good.

View the results here.

Katha Pollitt weighed in on the VIDA results in an article for Slate (here).  Pollit’s suggestion is that female editors can be an important factor in the number of women who publish (or have their works reviewed) in magazines: “[O]f of the relatively few editors who have made a consistent effort to find and develop women writers in recent years, most are female.”

-Bridget Crawford

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Lawmaker in State of Georgia Wants to Make Miscarriage a Crime

A bill introduced last month by a Georgia State Representative would make miscarriage a crime, unless the woman could prove that there was “no human involvement” in the miscarriage.  The bill doesn’t define “human involvement.”

Here’s what WebMD has to say (here) about miscarriage:

According to the March of Dimes, as many as 50% of all pregnancies end in miscarriage — most often before a woman misses a menstrual period or even knows she is pregnant. About 15% of recognized pregnancies will end in a miscarriage.

When does a miscarriage NOT involve a human being — the woman who miscarries?  Would 50% of all pregnant women then be criminals upon miscarriage?

Miscarriage does not always have a simple cause.  Miscarriage may be the result of chromosomal abnormalities or other factors like infection or illness.  Let’s say a pregnant woman catches a cold from her toddler.  She then miscarries.  Was there human involvement, for purposes of the Georgia statute?  Sounds like it; the woman would be a criminal in the State of Georgia.

This bill represents a new low in legislative disregard for women’s well-being.

-Bridget Crawford

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Visitor Opportunities at the University of South Carolina School of Law

The University of South Carolina School of Law is looking for visitors in the following subject areas for next academic year. Depending upon matches to needs, the visits will be either a semester or a year.

Constitutional Law (fall)
Wills, Trusts & Estates (fall)
Criminal Law (fall)
Evidence (fall)
Intellectual Property (either semester or possibly a year)
Corporate (either semester, possibly a year)
Civil Procedure (2) (spring)

Interested candidates should contact Associate Dean Rob Wilcox:
http://www.law.sc.edu/faculty/wilcox/

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Where the Women ARE: In Leadership Positions at the Columbia Law Review!

This nice news from Joy Ziegeweid, 2L at Columbia Law School:

The Columbia Law School community found out this week that the Editor in Chief of the Columbia Law Review for 2011-2012 will be [Ms.] Maren Hulden.  Of the administrative board for 2011-2012, 15 members are women and 11 are men.  Of the student notes accepted for publication, 6 are from women, and 3 are from men.  It’s pretty terrific!

It’s great to hear of women in leadership positions.  I never thought that would still be news in the 21st century, but it is.

Go Columbia!

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in Law Schools, The Overrepresentation of Men | 1 Comment

Questions Raised by Obama Shift on DOMA

With some time to reflect, the administration’s shift in position raises some interesting practical questions. As mentioned in my earlier post, the administration’s decision leaves the door open to others to intervene to defend section 3 of DOMA in pending suits. But what about tax controversies? In fact, one of the two cases mentioned by the Attorney General in his letter is an estate tax case.

How will the administration’s decision play out in this and other tax cases?

I’m not aware of anyone being able to intervene in a federal tax controversy outside of very narrow circumstances (e.g., Tax Ct. Rs. 216, 225, 245, and 325). Because there is no one else to defend section 3 of DOMA in many (if not most or all) tax cases, does that mean that DOMA will no longer be enforced as applied to the federal tax laws? Or will it only not be enforced against same-sex couples who reside in circuits that have left the question of the appropriate equal protection scrutiny as yet undecided? Or will this merely be taken care of at an administrative level before matters get to court, in which case intervention (and outside scrutiny) would be an impossibility in any event given the privacy protections given to taxpayers with regard to the prelitigation stages of their tax disputes? The letter from the Attorney General to House Speaker Boehner says that the executive branch will continue to enforce section 3 of DOMA. But how does the IRS enforce a law at the administrative level when they know that they are going to cave on DOMA’s application to the tax laws when the administrative proceeding reaches the stage of litigation and there appears to be no one else to step into your shoes in the litigation? Wouldn’t that be a colossal waste of agency resources? Clearly, this rather welcome policy shift raises more questions than it answers.

Addendum: There is also talk of having Congress appoint other attorneys to argue in support of DOMA. But how would that work in a tax controversy? Many tax controversies involve multiple issues. Would these outside attorneys take over the entire case or just the part related to DOMA? Given the pervasiveness of marital and family status considerations in the application of the tax laws can a line really be drawn between the two? Whether or not the outside attorneys fully step into the government’s shoes, how much access would these outside attorneys be given to private taxpayer information? Would they be permitted to, in essence, go on a fishing expedition for other issues to litigate from the relevant taxable year(s)? Would there be a risk that they might pursue issues against this taxpayer that the IRS generally would not, possibly in an effort to force a settlement of the case to avoid having a court rule that DOMA is unconstitutional? Would Congress amend the provision in the Internal Revenue Code (section 6103) that strictly limits the disclosure of taxpayer information to cover these outside attorneys? If not, what would prevent them from disclosing all sorts of otherwise confidential taxpayer information? These are just a few thoughts, and I would be interested in hearing if anyone has ever heard of someone other than the IRS or the Department of Justice (which handles tax litigation outside of the Tax Court) enforcing the tax laws in their stead.

H/T to Pat Cain.

-Tony Infanti

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Section 3 of DOMA Is Unconstitutional

In a sharp shift, the President has ordered the Justice Department to stop defending section 3 of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (which is the provision that says that same-sex marriages will not be recognized under federal law). President Obama and Attorney General Holder have apparently concluded that sexual-orientation-based classifications should be subject to heightened scrutiny and that section 3 of the federal DOMA cannot survive such scrutiny. The administration will no longer defend two challenges to DOMA filed in the Second Circuit and will advise courts in other pending challenges of its change in position. The door is still left open, however, for Congress to attempt to defend the law or for others to intervene and defend DOMA. It remains to be seen what the actual, practical effect of this policy shift will be.

Nonetheless, this is a major, salutary (and, given some of the arguments that they had been making in defense of DOMA, quite welcome) shift in policy by the Obama administration. For the full text of the letter from Attorney General Holder, click here.

-Tony Infanti

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Article on Adoption by Gay Parents

My colleague Prof. Amy Ronner has a new and intriguing article on adoption by gay parents, “When Courts Let Insane Delusions Pass the Rational Basis Test: The Newest Challenge to Florida’s Exclusion of Homosexuals from Adoption.”

It’s available on SSRN:  http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1721578

The abstract reads: 

Florida was the only state to categorically exclude homosexuals from adopting children. Recently, a gay prospective father, Frank Martin Gill, successfully challenged the constitutionality of that homophobic statutory provision. The State of Florida appealed and The Third District Court of Appeal, affirming Judge Cindy S. Lederman, concluded that Florida’s statute violated Gill’s equal protection rights. See Fla. Dep’t of Children & Families v. In re Matter of Adoption of X.X.G. and N.R.G., 35 Fla. L. Weekly D2107 (Sept. 22, 2010).

This article, one of the first to address this high profile decision, looks at the constitutional issue in a new way. It yokes together what might seem to be two distinct areas of the law: the doctrine of insane delusion under wills and trusts’ law and rational basis review in constitutional law. Its narrow thesis is that the statutory exclusion of homosexuals from adoption is based on an insane delusion and that any court upholding it under the rational basis test is itself insanely deluded. On a broader level, however, this article explores the damage that results when courts use the rational basis test to uphold legislation which is premised on an irrational belief that is refuted by ample evidence to the contrary.

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Higdon on “Fatherhood by Conscription: Nonconsensual Insemination and the Duty of Child Support”

Michael J. Higdon (Tennessee) has posted to SSRN his working paper Fatherhood by Conscription: Nonconsensual Insemination and the Duty of Child Support.  Here is the abstract:

Nathaniel was a California teenager who became a father in 1995. The mother of Nathaniel’s child was named Ricci, and at the time of conception, she was thirty-four years old. Nathaniel, however, was merely fifteen. Although Nathaniel admitted to having sex with Ricci voluntarily about five times, the fact that he was under sixteen years of age at the time made it legally impossible for him to consent to sexual intercourse. In other words, under California law, Nathaniel was not only a new father, but was also a victim of statutory rape. Nonetheless, in a subsequent action for child support, the court held that Nathaniel was liable for the support of the child who was born as a result of his rape. According to the court, “Victims have rights. Here, the victim also has responsibilities.”

Much of the law relating to child support is based on the fact that it is typically in a child’s best interest to receive financial support from mothers as well as fathers. So strong is this precept that courts will hold a father liable for child support even in the face of wrongful conduct by the mother. Thus, child support is essentially a form of strict liability with the justification being that the child is an innocent party, and, therefore, it is the child’s interests and welfare that the court must look to in adjudicating support. At first glance, such a standard seems eminently reasonable. Few would argue with the proposition that, if a man voluntarily has sex with a woman and a child results, then he should be liable for child support. The problem with the court’s current approach, however, is that the standard is so strict that even those men who never consented to the sexual act that caused the pregnancy are nonetheless liable for the support of the resulting child. These men include males who became fathers as a result of statutory rape and also adult males who became fathers either as a result of sexual assault or having their sperm stolen and used by a woman for purposes of self-insemination. In all such cases, these “fathers” have been held liable for child support.

The purpose then of this article is, first, to underscore the criticisms that other commentators have raised on how the strict liability approach poses a grave injustice not only to the men who are pressed into the obligations of fatherhood but also to society, which has an interest in protecting all citizens from sexual assault. More importantly, however, I also offer a new objection and, on that basis, a proposed solution. Specifically, the courts’ justification that all children are entitled to support from both biological parents has been seriously undermined by the laws regulating artificial insemination. In that context, a man (regardless of whether he is the sperm donor or the non-donor husband of the inseminated female) only becomes the legal father of an artificially inseminated child if he affirmatively consents. I argue that it is incongruous to allow exceptions for formal sperm donors yet wholesale deny similar protections for those who, although not in the setting of a sperm bank, never consented to the use of their sperm. Accordingly, I propose a solution whereby courts adopt an approach similar (albeit narrower) to that used in artificial insemination cases to adjudicate child support claims against those men who were forced into fatherhood as a result of nonconsensual insemination.

The full paper is available here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Where are the Women? Presidents Day Edition

Ruthann Robson asks this question over at the Constitutional Law Prof Blog:

“Where Are the Women?” is a query that is not limited to the category of United States Presidents.

Consider Lynn E. Ford’s work on women and politics, especially their complete absence in South Carolina elected office; or the lack of women in the group tasked with revising Egypt’s Constitution.

The dearth of women working on Wikipedia has received much attention; less attention has been paid to a compilation by VIDA looking at figures from 2010 for influential outlets, including these revealing charts for   The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, and The New Republic. While not state actors, such media is certainly part of the “civil society” democracy contemplates.

And then there are law reviews.  The newest issue of The Georgetown Law Journal is women-free.  And there are a sufficient number of other law review issues and conferences of a similar composition to support a regular feature pondering the lack of women at Feminist Law Professors. * * * *

Read the rest of her post here.

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in The Underrepresentation of Women | 1 Comment

Chapman Law School Hosts Eboni Nelson on “Justice Thomas and the Promise of Education Equality”

This week Chapman University School of Law hosts Professor Eboni Nelson.  Professor Nelson will discuss her work on “Justice Thomas and the Promise of Education Equality.”

We are extremely fortunate to have Professor Eboni Nelson, as an invited FIRST (Fresh Ideas from Rising Scholars and Teachers), joining us to present her work-in-process on Justice Thomas and the Promise of Education Equality this Thursday, February 24, 2011 at 11:30 in Room 237A. I recently heard Professor Nelson speak on a panel with Professor Derrick Bell and she was captivating and memorable despite the obvious competition. Please join me in warmly welcoming Professor Nelson to Chapman and ensuring that the workshop is an enriching success.

If you are in the Chapman area this week, additional details are available from Professor Francine Lipman (lipman@chapman.edu).

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in Primary and Secondary Education, Upcoming Lectures | 1 Comment

CFP: “Excavating and Integrating Law and Humanities in the Core Curriculum”

From Melissa Murray (Berkeley):

Call for Panelists
AALS Section on Law and Humanities
“Excavating and Integrating Law and Humanities in the Core Curriculum”
2012 AALS Annual Meeting
January 4-8, 2012
Washington, D.C.

The AALS Section on Law and Humanities will hold a program during the AALS 2012 Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. with panelists who will share methods of teaching law and humanities perspectives in “core courses” such as property, torts, contracts, corporations, federal income tax, civil procedure, contracts, or criminal law, and others not traditionally understood to include these perspectives.

Many agree that law and humanities perspectives are important vehicles for unpacking the substantive content of the core curriculum, as well as for building and honing key skills necessary for legal practice.  Though many acknowledge that these perspectives are vitally important, there is less agreement as to how faculty can successfully implement these perspectives in their classrooms.  This program will include a variety of panelists and will explore ways law and humanities perspectives can be used successfully to enrich law school teaching.

To be considered as a panelist, please submit a statement of interest by Friday, March 25, 2011, including a description (2-3 paragraphs is sufficient) of the course that you teach and the methods that you use to excavate and integrate law and humanities perspectives that you would discuss as part of the panel.  Please also submit an updated curriculum vitae.

Panelists will be selected by April 11, 2011.  Each selected panelist will be required to submit a 4-6 page draft in October 2011, describing their law and humanities teaching technique(s), for use by the moderator.  The Section hopes to have these papers published as part of an online mini-symposium sponsored by the California Law Review.

All panelists will be responsible for paying their annual meeting registration fee and travel expenses. Full-time faculty members of AALS member and fee-paid law schools are eligible to submit papers. Foreign, visiting (and not full-time on a different faculty) and adjunct
faculty members, graduate students, and fellows are not eligible to submit.

Any inquiries about the Call for Panelists should be submitted to Professor Melissa Murray, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law via electronic mail at mmurray@law.berkeley.edu

-Bridget Crawford

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University of Mississippi LGBT Symposium Friday, March 11, 2011

The National LGBT Bar Association cordially invites you to attend the:

University of Mississippi LGBT Symposium
Friday, March 11, 2011   |   9:00am-5:00pm
E. F. Yerby Conference Center
7 Alumni Drive
Oxford, Mississippi
Click here to download the registration form.

The day-long event, organized by Sue Sweeney, a second year law student at the University of Mississippi and the Southern Region I Co-Chair for the National LGBT Bar Association’s Law Student Congress, is an opportunity for interested legal professionals, law students, and community members to learn more about the unique legal issues facing the LGBT community.

The symposium will include programming focused on family law matters such as taxation, housing, family formation, and estate planning, as well as workshops on transgender- and youth-specific issues.  Workshops will be led by distinguished speakers from Lambda Legal, the Southern Poverty Law Center, the ACLU-Mississippi, and the University of Mississippi. Click here to download a copy of the agenda.

The registration fee is $125/person.  Featuring primarily introductory content, the symposium is appropriate for all audiences.  The program is available for 4.5 hours of continuing legal education (CLE) credit in Mississippi.

Space is limited, register now!  For more information, please contact Sue Sweeney.

This event is proudly sponsored by the:

The National LGBT Bar Association is a national association of lawyers, judges and other legal professionals, law students, activists, and affiliated LGBT legal organizations. The association promotes justice in and through the legal profession for the LGBT community in all its diversity.

www.lgbtbar.org

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On Writing As A (Sort Of) Group Project

Over at Inside Higher Ed, Kerry Ann Roquemore explains the utility of writing groups. She observes:

Faculty development researchers have demonstrated that accountability and support increase writing productivity among new faculty members. And yet, when graduate students, post-docs and new faculty talk about needing support that goes beyond substantive feedback, they’re often met with some form of shaming: “Why do you need a support group?” “Can’t you just motivate yourself to write?” “This is your job dear, so if you don’t want to write there’s plenty of unemployed people who would love to be in your position.” In short, many are advised to shut up and write. And because shaming moves people into action, that may actually work for a week or two. But true needs have a way of resurfacing. So instead of taking the tough-guy, ignore-your-needs, shut-up-and-write approach, I want to suggest the opposite. In other words, I believe that embracing your needs will help you to develop a support system that will move you from the occasional shame-induced writing binges towards a healthy, consistent, and sustainable daily writing routine.

–Ann Bartow

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Gender, Race and Power in the Legal Academy (Or, the BAU Haus Rules)

In recent days news circulated regarding an incident at Widener University’s school of law. It seems that a faculty member was called to task for repeatedly offering hypotheticals about killing the dean in the context of teaching his criminal law class. The dean happens to be a black woman, Linda Ammons. Some students complained about what they viewed as repeated instances of “violent, racist, sexist” behavior by the white male professor. There were also apparently claims by students that the professor had engaged in a “pattern” of misconduct , “cursing and coarse behavior, “racist and sexist statements” and “violent, personal scenarios that demean and threaten” the professor’s colleagues at the institution. You can read one newspaper’s account of the matter here.

I have watched in horrid fascination the various deconstructive responses to this story from members of the legal academy:

1. Silence. This is perhaps the most interesting response, especially given that Dean Ammons has been in the academy for many years and is known to many.

2. Dispassionate equanimity. This mostly consisted of calls to wait and see, to not jump to conclusions until all of the facts are in. We are, after all, law professors. We wouldn’t be acting according to our training if we took a position before knowing all of the facts.

3. Precedential analysis and dismissal. A number of scholars, many of them “progressive”, have suggested that if the legal academy were to get up in arms about what the professor under fire said, it wouldn’t sit well with the position of many (but certainly not all) progressive faculty members in the case of Ward Churchill. Some of you will recall Ward Churchill as the academic who in an essay compared World Trade Center victims on 9/11 to “little Eichmanns”. Churchhill was fired by his university but later reinstated.

4. It’s all good because it’s part of the game. Many academics who also teach criminal law have loudly asserted that hypotheticals that feature the death or maiming of people are part of the “morgue humor” that prevails in this area. After all, homicide is for many of us who teach criminal law the crown jewel of the course. There are, by necessity, unpleasant discussions. People die in some cases, sometimes in really horrible ways. If we didn’t laugh, we might cry. Also, an acknowledged part of the “game” of academics is engaging in what one professor called “passive-aggressive” behavior towards administrators. How else can you get back at deans who give you bad offices and worse schedules than with a little good-natured ribbing in hypotheticals?

Moreover, many have asserted in response to this situation that an important part of the game is academic freedom. This mostly consists of assertions that making such statements is well within the rights of a professor. After all, one of the hallmarks of academia is the right to make remarks in the course of doing our work that may be unpopular. Indeed, the whole notion of tenure is closely tied to academic freedom, in recognition of the fact that academics may sometimes do and say things that are not well received or highly valued.

Somehow I have been troubled by all of these responses, so I offer my own deconstruction of the deconstruction.

Silence is perhaps the worst of the responses. Silence basically suggests that this just doesn’t matter enough to comment upon one way or another. In some respects this is akin to another relatively recent situation involving a black woman academic. See my blog post On Being a Black Woman Lawyer (Or, the Sound of Silence).

The dispassionate equanimity approach, while making sense onits face, obscures the broader concerns here and hides itself in a cloak of legalism. No, we shouldn’t make a decision until the facts are in. But given the nature of the claims here, where we are not really dealing with a denial (the professor under siege apparently admits that he made such remarks about the dean), there is plenty of room for righteous indignation. While thedispassionate equanimity approach is no doubt a tribute to legal formalism, it is also a marvelous example of what some people call the “formalist fiction”: that broader normative and policy considerations have no relationship to formal articulations of law.

The problem with the particular brand of precedential analysis offered here is that the analogy to Ward Churchill is, in my view, a very inapt precedent, as it offers little that is substantively useful by way of analogy. A professor who writes an essay ostensibly assailing a group of people that most of us consider innocent victims is very different from a professor who apparently repeatedly makes remarks that invite the captive listeners to violently envision an actual individual known to the listeners. At a minimum, we can generally choose not to read essays. Students in contrast have little power to choose not to listen to their professors or to absent themselves. As I have written elsewhere, the paradigmatic approach of the “legal method” is sometimes flawed, as it is based upon the often unstated assumption that there is broad agreement on the warrants of the paradigm. Now, we usually understand that in undertaking analysis by analogy, there may be few cases that agree “on all fours,” and that part of the exercise is exploring the aptness of the cases cited as precedent. The problem comes in when such analyses take shortcuts whereby no one bothers to parse the analogy, usually based on the assumption that we all agree anyway, when really some of us, sometimes huge sums of some of us, disagree on the aptness of the precedent. This dissonance undermines the value of precedent as a legitimate tool for reaching conclusions, and works a startlingly odd form of legal discursive violence on those in disagreement.

The it’s all good, it’s part of the game approach also has much to recommend it on its face. As someone who worked as an assistant prosecutor in an office where we once passed around photos of a dismembered drug suspect and invited laughter (“there’s one we won’t have to try”), I really understand “morgue humor.” When I taught criminal law I had a hypo where a robber came into the classroom and held a small knife to my back, and I in turn pulled out my high powered assault weapon from the podium (where I repeatedly asserted that I kept it), aimed it at the robber, demanded that he drop his knife and then shot the robber repeatedly until he died. Self-defense or not?

I also get the urge to passive-aggressiveness in hypotheticals. I used to offer a long-running hypo about leaning out of the impossibly small, oddly-positioned window of the office to which administrators had assigned me (jab) and doing target practice by firing across the street to hit the window of a tobacco shop. The “joke”, and the key fact, was that I did this while hundreds of people gathered for a parade in the street below (as was sometimes the case). As I used to explain, I taught so many large classes and served on so many committees that there was little chance that a parade would occur when I was not present at the building (another jab). Is it manslaughter or murder if I kill someone during target practice? It all made for great discussions. But never, ever, did it occur to me to make an actual person, and certainly not an actual person in my workplace, the subject of my hypothetical homicides.

Passive-aggressive humor that explicitly or implicitly assails those who hold power over you is a time-honored part of what some scholars have called “carnivalization”. Carnivalization usually occurs where social subordinates breech the norms of polite discourse and behavior as a means of acting out against oppression. Carnivalization may include mockery of those in power or self-mockery by the oppressed group. I have written about this elsewhere.

The problem with carnivalization is that while carnivalization represents an upsetting of mainstream power and norms, it is possible to deploy carnivalizing norms to silence persistent outsiders, especially when those outsiders are perceived as “upstarts”, that is, when they begin to have some claim to power or status themselves. In my previous writing on this topic I used as a principal example Imus’s calling members of the championship Rutgers women’s basketball team “nappy-headed ho’s”. I also offered the instance of upper middle class white college students throwing “pimp and ‘ho” parties right in the midst of their dismayed black classmates. This is ersatz carnival, a cynical inversion of carnival norms. Even in today’s post-racial, post-sexist United States, race, class and gender still frame relations of power. Even when the president is a black man, or the dean is a black woman, there is no disruption of mainstream power norms when those who have traditionally wielded power continue to deploy it in verbal assaults—it is racist, sexist, BAU: business as usual.

-Lolita Buckner Inniss

cross-post from Ain’t I a Feminist Legal Scholar, Too?

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Posted in Academia, Race and Racism | 2 Comments

Should Courts Award Child-Rearing Damages for “Wrongful Birth” in Cases of the Rape of a Minor?

The issue of whether there should be a right to abortion in cases of rape has arisen again in response to comments by teen sensation Justin Bieber. The 16 year-old pop star was asked about abortion in rape cases, and he responded:

“That’s just really sad, but everything happens for a reason.”

“I don’t know how that would be a reason,” Bieber continued. “I guess I haven’t been in that position, so I wouldn’t be able to judge that.”

This post, though, is not about the right to abortion, either in cases of rape or consensual sex. It is about what happens when a rape victim does not have an abortion and delivers a child.  The vast majority of jurisdictions refuse to award child-rearing damages under a “wrongful birth” or “wrongful pregnancy” theory.  Adopting this logic, the Supreme Court of Mississippi found that an 11 year-old rape victim could not recover damages for “wrongful birth” in its recent opinion in Mississippi State Federation of Colored Women’s Club Housing for Elderly in Clinton, Inc. v. In the Interest of L.R., 2010 WL 5173604 (Miss. 2010). I disagree.

Continue reading

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Posted in Coerced Sex, Courts and the Judiciary, Reproductive Rights | 1 Comment

Facebook Recognizes Civil Unions and Domestic Partnerships

Facebook has now added “in a civil union” and “in a domestic partnership” to its options for relationship status. There is a great post over at the tech web site ZDNet on this change. The post, which is part tongue-in-cheek and part serious, is titled “The country of Facebook recognizes civil unions.” They note that, with 600,000,000 users, Facebook ranks in size just behind China and India in population, so it is as if another country is being added to the list of those that recognize same-sex unions. But, they also correctly point out that not all of these users are being given this relationship status option. Only users in a small list of countries will be afforded this option and, puzzlingly, the list does not correspond to those that have civil unions or domestic partnerships. For example, Canada is on the list, but it has same-sex marriage, not civil unions or domestic partnerships.

-Tony Infanti

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Posted in LGBT Rights | 1 Comment

Cyra Choudhury on “Exporting Subjects: Globalizing Family Law Progress Through International Human Rights”

Cyra Akila Choudhury (FIU) has posted to SSRN her article Exporting Subjects: Globalizing Family Law Progress Through International Human Rights, 32 J. Mich. Int’l Law  259 (2011) Here is the abstract:

This article examines the global export of domestic U.S. legal projects and strategies in the realm of family law and gender justice to South Asia. While such projects have undoubtedly achieved substantial gains for women in the U.S., there have also been costs. At a remove of two decades, scholars have now begun to theorize those costs and argue that feminism needs to reconsider its commitments to particular projects that have been held central to women’s emancipation. Yet much of these critiques have not reached the transnational women’s movements that are led by U.S. feminist activists and scholars. Relying on Liberal notions of personhood or subjectivity and progress, U.S. transnational feminists continue to export those subjects and projects now being critiqued at home to the Global South. The primary means by which this export occurs is through the conflation of domestic family law with women’s rights as “human rights.” Indeed, international human rights provide a convenient discursive and structural vehicle to achieve this export. However, within local contexts, such Liberal projects are often met with resistance and reshaped in ways that may not make sense to women in the North. Moreover, women in the South have articulated a different set of priorities focused on economic distribution and development that are often ignored by women’s rights activists in the North. This has to do with a general discomfort with economic redistribution inherent in Liberal theory as it has evolved in the U.S., as well as with the more traditional focus on civil and political rights. The aim of the article is to highlight the difficulties of exporting notions of personhood and progress and to argue for a reorientation of transnational feminism in a manner that adopts the priorities of local women in the Global South and not just their elites.

The full article is available here.

-Bridget Crawford

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CFP: South-North Exchange “Migratory Currents in the Americas”

From Darren Rosenblum, this info:

The South-North Exchange on Theory, Culture and Law has a call for paper proposals for its upcoming program “Migratory Currents in the Americas Corrientes migratorias en las Américas.

As the world globalizes in terms of nations’ economies, trade and investment, borders are opened up more easily for “freer” flows of capital, goods and products. But globalization has also meant millions of transnational people; according to the UN’s Population Division, there are now almost 200 million international migrants, doubling the figure recorded in 1980, only 30 years ago. Consequently, migrants are now to be found in every corner of the globe, some of them moving within their own regions and others travelling from one part of the world to another. Today, human migrations have reached higher volumes than ever before in history.

These migration trends present different characteristics from past times, prompting some to herald a “new” era of international migration. One key characteristic of this new era is the reconfiguration of the population movement map globally, created by a growing diversity of routes and connections—between shifting and morphing sites of origin and destination.  Immigration therefore has been an increasingly complex and important issue for policy makers, historians, sociologists, jurists and many others.  For these reasons, the SNX program centers international migration in the 2011 theme.

The 2011 SNX organizing committee invites paper proposals addressing:

  1. Migration trends in the Americas, including South-to-North migration, South-to-South migrations, etc.
  2. Skilled and unskilled workers’ migration, and its impact on developing and developed countries.
  3. Race, gender, class, sexual orientation and related identity issues as a feature or cause of migration.
  4. Socio-cultural impacts of migration locally, regionally or globally.
  5. Historic and/or comparative approaches to migration policymaking.
  6. Human trafficking: causes, effects and possible remedies.
  7. States’ international responsibility for illegal immigration.
  8. Challenges for progressive academics, and for organizing and/or integrating international workers and intellectuals.
  9. Deportations, Repatriations, and return migrations;
  10. Emerging legal interpretations of citizenship/membership;
  11. Victimization and criminalization of immigrants: discrimination, exploitation, violence, etc.
  12. Exploitation of minors.

The SNX on “Human Migrations Across the Americas” or “Corrientes migratorias en las Américas” will provide an opportunity for legal scholars, social analysts, policymakers, and activists to critically examine migrations from different perspectives. The event will take place in the Dominican Republic, a perfect scenario to discuss this issue: the DR is a place where contemporary currents of migration collide—where Haitian migrants arrive daily in search of a livable life while thousands of Dominicans leave for Puerto Rico, the US or other locations for the very same reason. Exemplifying the complexities of migration in these times, this localized dynamic will provide the backdrop for our exchange.

To participate in the Exchange, please fully complete and timely return this Form by February 15, 2011 with an Abstract (1-3 paragraphs) of your proposed presentation/paper.

Additional information is here.

The program is sponsored by project of LatCrit (Latina & Latino Critical Legal Theory, Inc.), University of Miami School of Law, Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE), Escuela de derecho, Universidad Interamericana de Puerto Rico, Facultad de derecho.

-Bridget Crawford

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Hawaii One Step Away from Civil Unions

Yesterday was a busy day for the Hawaii Senate on the LGBT front. Not only did they confirm the first openly gay justice to the state’s Supreme Court (blogged here earlier today), but they also took the final step in passing a civil unions bill. The bill now goes to Governor Neil Abercrombie, who has promised to sign the bill into law.

-Tony Infanti

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Sisters On the Bench

Hannah Brenner, Michigan State University College of Law, is publishing Gender and the Judiciary in South Africa: A Review of the Documentary Film Courting Justice, in a forthcoming issue of the Yale Journal of International Affairs. Here is the abstract.

Despite an explicit constitutional commitment to address the gendered and racialized aspects of the South African judiciary, as of 2008, only eighteen percent of the judges on the South African Superior Courts were women. The documentary film Courting Justice, created by Ruth B. Cowan, features the individual and collective stories of seven of these judges. It reveals the power of the court as an instrumental agent of change in the post-apartheid era and examines how these judges fit into this framework. The film offers a profound contribution to the global study of law and gender and to an important body of work on women in the world’s legal professions, a field that has not traditionally focused on South Africa as a site of exploration.

Download the review from SSRN at the link.

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Posted in Feminism and Law, Feminism and the Workplace, Legal Profession, Sisters In Other Nations | Tagged , | 1 Comment

First Openly Gay Justice Confirmed for Hawaii Supreme Court

Yesterday, the Hawaii Senate unanimously confirmed Sabrina McKenna to the Hawaii Supreme Court. McKenna is the first openly gay person to be appointed to the court, and her appointment marks the first time that the five-member court will have two women sitting on the court. In another first, McKenna is the first graduate of the University of Hawaii’s law school to sit on the court.

McKenna was born in Japan and raised by a single mother after her father died when she was nine years old. McKenna served as a state district and circuit court judge for seventeen years before being elevated to Hawaii’s highest court. In the Honolulu Star Advertiser (article linked to above), McKenna is quoted as saying, “I feel like I’m living a dream, an American dream, that it is possible to come from humble beginnings and achieve the highest heights.”

Congratulations, Justice McKenna!

-Tony Infanti

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Will UN Secretary-General post remain a male preserve?

Tradition has it that the post of Secretary-General should rotate so that each geographical region gets its “turn.” Women have never had a “turn”. . .

Equality Now Women’s Action, November 2005

In her post today on IntLawGrrls, Madame la Secrétaire générale?, Diane Amann draws attention to this article calling on United Nations member states to appoint a woman to be the next UN Secretary-General starting in January 2012.  When the SG post last came open, states were strongly urged to consider nominating women (see, e.g., this action item from 2005, suggesting many accomplished women for the post). Only one female candidate emerged, Vaira Vike-Freiberga (photo), then President of Latvia, who ran at the joint invitation of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania. In her statement announcing her candidacy she said:

With my formal decision to run for the post of UN Secretary General I wish to encourage women all over the world to continue their efforts to challenge prejudices and stereotypes. Half of humankind has never been represented at the helm of the UN. It is time to change this practice, which fails to reflect the structure of the world population. At the same time I wish to emphasize that the world cannot be divided into female and male, and we all must join together to defend human values and make the world a better place.

In a straw vote in the Security Council, Vike-Freiberga placed third among the six candidates, with two opposing votes from permanent members of the Council, no doubt Russia and China. Relations between Russia and Latvia were tense, and China was insistent that it was Asia’s “turn” for the post of Secretary-General, a position strongly supported by Russia and many other UN member states. Until Ban Ki-moon’s appointment in 2006, only one Asian had served as UN Secretary-General, U Thant of Burma (left), who served from 1961 to 1971. A number of Asian women were among those listed as potential candidates for the post of Secretary-General, including Singapore’s ambassador to the US, Chan Heng Chee (right). Some of them supported other candidates, but most simply did not have the support of their governments to run for the post, a key factor in this highly political process.

(Adapted from my post on IntLawGrrls here.)
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The Value of a Name

Names are important.  They reflect our identity, and so the ability to keep or change them implicates our autonomy.  A recent lawsuit in Japan brings this importance into sharp relief.  There, a group of women filed suit yesterday, challenging a provision of the civil code that stipulates that a wife and husband must share the same last name, almost always that of the husband.

The lawsuit in Japan reveals how deeply people care about their names, making explicit a sentiment that we often suppress or downplay in the United States.

As I have previously discussed, a woman who marries a man in the United States will probably spend a lot of time justifying her decision to keep or change her surname.  This is true no matter what her decision is.  A women who keeps her name must be prepared for a lifetime of explaining that her name is not “Mrs. His Name.”  A woman who changes her name to that of her husband faces condescending or insinuating questions (“Did he make you change it?”) from those who view the choice as regressive.  A woman who hyphenates her last name with her husband’s will doubtless encounter strangers commenting on what a mouthful it is.

It seems to me that any naming choice can be good.  One woman might keep her name to preserve a continuous professional identity, or to avoid the bureaucratic hassle of changing it.  Another might change her name because she never really liked it, or because she prefers to have the same last name as her husband.  The problem isn’t the substance of the choice itself.  The problem is that no matter what the choice is, it will prompt a negative response from some group of people.

It easy to dismiss the naming decision and its repercussions as unimportant.  Indeed, women are criticized–often by other women–for “overreacting” if they express irritation when people make unfounded assumption about their names.  Perhaps we tend to undervalue the naming decision in the United States–to dismiss it as “not worth getting upset about”–because it’s a choice that’s legally ours to make and thus easy to take for granted.  The lawsuit in Japan reveals the value of that choice to those who don’t have it.  And in so doing, perhaps it can encourage us to respect the naming choices of those of us who are fortunate enough to choose.

– Nancy Leong

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Posted in Feminism and Culture, Feminism and Law | 3 Comments

Baby Steps Toward Marriage Equality in Maryland

Lambda Legal is publicizing a change to the procedure for issuing birth certificates in Maryland. No later than March 1, the Division of Vital Records has ordered that, if a woman giving birth to a child indicates that she is married, the information regarding her spouse must be entered on the child’s birth certificate regardless of that spouse’s gender. This change was prompted by last year’s opinion from the Maryland Attorney General regarding the recognition of out-of-state same-sex marriages in Maryland. (Click here for the text of the letter from the Division of Vital Records.)

Before this change, a court order was necessary to add a woman’s same-sex spouse as a parent on their child’s birth certificate. Note that this change in procedure does not affect gay couples using surrogates. They must still obtain a court order to have the birth certificate reflect reality.

Underscoring the fragility of legal gains for same-sex couples (or, as I have put it, imposing a tax on the civil rights gains of same-sex couples, see Taxing Civil Rights Gains, 16 Mich. J. Gender & L. 319 (2010)), Lambda Legal quite wisely counsels married lesbian couples who avail themselves of the new procedure to still have the nonbiological parent adopt the child. (The reason for this is advice is that judicial decrees of adoption are far harder for other states to fight or refuse to honor than the automatic inclusion of the nonbiological parent on a birth certificate.) So, easier procedure, but still an added burden/extra cost to make sure that both parents are legally recognized.

And what would be a step forward without a step back? Late last week, Randy Forbes, a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia, introduced the “Parental Title Protection Act.” This bill would require all federal agencies to use the terms “mother” and “father” when referring to the parents of a child. Denying recognition to same-sex families, the bill would specifically prohibit federal agencies from using “parent 1” and “parent 2” on forms. This attack on families headed by same-sex couples is apparently directed at changes that the State Department is making to the passport application forms to make them more inclusive (blogged here).

-Tony Infanti

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Happy Valentine’s Day!

The New York Times has a nice idea for a Valentine’s Day gift that the Obama administration can give to the LGBT community–ceasing to defend the indefensible Defense of Marriage Act.

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Nancy Levit and Allen Roston, Information for Submitting Articles to Law Reviews and Journals

Those of us running the law review gauntlet in the next few weeks might be interested in Nancy Levit’s and Allen Roston’s updated chart (here) about law journal submissions, expedites and rankings from different sources for the spring 2011 submission season. It now encompasses 202 law reviews.

-Bridget Crawford

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Multidimensional Masculinities and Law: A Colloquium

Ann McGinley (UNLV) has passed along the details of a program to be held in Las Vegas next weekend. “Multidimensional Masculinities and Law: A Colloquium” is sponsored by UNLV Boyd School of Law and co-sponsored by Suffolk University Law School.  The colloquium celebrates a new edited collection, Masculinites and Law: A Multidimensional Approach, edited by Frank Rudy Cooper and Ann C. McGinley.  The book will be published by New York University Press in 2011.  The Colloquium will also consider the direction of the field of Masculinities and Law.

Here’s the program:

Multidimensional Masculinities and Law: A Colloquium
Friday and Saturday, February 18 and 19, 2011
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law
Las Vegas, Nevada

Friday, February 18

9:00 – Continental Breakfast & Coffee

9:15 – Introductions

9:30 – 10:50 – Panel I: Theory I – Multidimensional Masculinities

Moderator: Elizabeth L. MacDowell

Panelists:

Athena D. Mutua: The Multidimensional Turn: Revisiting Progressive Black Masculinities
Juliet Williams: The Theory and Practice of Multiple Masculinities
Frank Rudy Cooper: The King Stay the King: Multidimensional Masculinities and Capitalism in The Wire

10: 50 – 11:10- Break and Refreshments

11:10- 12:30 – Panel II: Theory II – Feminism, Masculinities and Shifting Lenses

Moderator: Sylvia Lazos

Panelists:

Nancy E. Dowd,
Nancy Levit, and
Ann C. McGinley: Feminist Legal Theory Meets Masculinities Theory

12:30 – 2:00 – Lunch – Keynote Speakers— Devon W. Carbado and Russell K. Robinson, UCLA School of Law

2:10-3:30 Panel III: Masculinities, Work and Families: Empirical Observations

Moderator: Ann Cammett

Panelists:

Joan C. Williams: Caring in Secret
Beth Burkstrand-Reid: Masculinities and “Mr. Mom”
Leticia M. Saucedo: Border-Crossing Stories and Masculinities

3:30-3:45 – Break & Refreshments

3:50-5:10 – Panel IV: Masculinities and Legal Constructs

Moderator: Fatma Marouf

Panelists:

Kim Buchanan: E-race-ing Gender: The Racial Construction of Prison Rape
Dina Francesca Haynes, Masculinities and Child Soldiers in Post-Conflict Societies
Zachary Kramer: Of Meat and Manhood

6:30 – Dinner – sponsored by Suffolk University Law School, Boston, MA (participants and invited guests only)

Saturday, February 19

9:00 – Continental Breakfast & Coffee

9:15 – Announcements

9:30 – 10:50- Panel V: Masculinities and Institutions

Moderator: Elaine Shoben

Panelists:

Joan W. Howarth: Masculinities and Institutional Strength
Deborah L. Brake: Sport and Masculinity: The Promise and Limits of Title IX
Jamie R. Abrams: Enlisting the Nineteenth Amendment as a Weapon for Political Equality

10:50-11:10 – Break & Refreshments

11:15- 12:35 – Panel VI: Masculinities and Relationships

Moderator: Terrill Pollman

Panelists:

Sam Jones: The Invisible Man: The Neglect of Men and Boys in the Publicity and Prosecutions Regarding Human Trafficking
Dwight Fee, Democratizing Masculinity?: Towards a Relational Ethic Among Men
Reginald L. Robinson: Dark Secrets II: Masculinity, Down-Low Phenomenon and the Myth of Mother-Son Love

12:45-2:15- Lunch – A Conversation— Developing the Discipline of Masculinities and Law: Where Do We Go from Here? – Library Reserve Room

Discussion Leaders: Frank Rudy Cooper and Ann C. McGinley

2:20- 3:40- Panel VII: International and Comparative Perspectives of Masculinities

Moderator: Rachel J. Anderson

Panelists:

Camille A. Nelson: Sexuality without Borders: Exploring the Paradoxical Connection between Dancehall and Colonial Law in Jamaica
Valorie K. Vojdik: Masculinities, Feminism and the Turkish Headscarf Ban: Sahin Revisted
Barbara Pozzo: Masculinities Italian Style

3:50- 5:00 – Dessert Reception – Reserve Room of the Wiener-Rogers Law Library, UNLV

There will be a book display in the Wiener Rogers Law Library on Saturday, February 19.

Looks like a great line-up!

-Bridget Crawford

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Disconnect Between Actions and Words

Apparently, we aren’t the only ones who have noticed the disconnect between the rhetoric leading up to the November 2010 elections and the actions of legislators since the beginning of this year. Charles Blow has a column in the New York Times today titled “Repeal, Restrict and Repress” on just this subject. And, earlier this week, Gail Collins had a column in which she highlighted some of the absolutely crazy legislation (e.g., a bill that would require every adult in South Dakota to own a gun) introduced by state legislators as an example of the things we don’t really need to worry about because:

About 10 percent of a state legislature is composed of people who are totally loony. This is in a good state. It’s possible that in yours, the proportion is much, much higher. That is probably something to worry about, but not today.

In the spirit of pointing out more of the crazy bills that have been introduced, it is worth noting that an Iowa legislator, Rep. Rich Anderson, introduced a bill titled the “Religious Conscience Protection Act.” This bill would allow businesses to refuse to (1) provide benefits to the spouse of an employee, (2) provide housing to a married couple, or (3) provide adoption or reproductive services, if doing so would violate a sincerely held religious belief. In essence, the bill legalizes discrimination against same-sex couples.

Someone ought to remind Rep. Anderson that religion has been used to mask bigotry before. Indeed, the trial judge who essentially banished the Lovings (of Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967), the Supreme Court case that struck down the remaining state antimiscegenation statutes) from Virginia stated:

‘Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents. And but for the interference with his arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages. The fact that he separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mix.’

Loving, 388 U.S. at 3. We too often forget that interpretations of religious texts are no less mutable than interpretations of other texts, and that what was, at one time, a “sincerely held belief” may later come to be seen as a wholly unsupportable idea at odds with the basic tenets of a religion. Fortunately, it appears that Rep. Anderson has tabled the bill but left open the possibility of bringing it up again at a later time.

In addition to the states pushing constitutional amendments to ban same-sex marriage (according to Charles Blow’s count, these states include Iowa, Indiana, West Virginia, and Wyoming–it also appears to be on the agenda in Minnesota), the same Utah legislator who introduced the “Family Policy Bill” (blogged earlier here) has introduced another bill that is only one sentence long: “An arrangement, agreement, or transaction that is unlawful or violates public policy is void and unenforceable.” Though again far from a model of clarity, it is feared that this bill would void any contractual arrangements entered into by same-sex couples as a substitute for marriage. He apparently introduced the same bill in 2006, and it narrowly missed passing then.

Scary as this proposed legislation is, it is thought that Virginia’s and Montana’s existing Defense of Marriage Acts are broadly worded enough to already have this effect. See Mont. Code Ann. § 40-1-401(4) (“A contractual relationship entered into for the purpose of achieving a civil relationship that is prohibited under subsection (1) [which includes same-sex marriage] is void as against public policy.”); Va. Code Ann. § 20-45.3 (“A civil union, partnership contract or other arrangement between persons of the same sex purporting to bestow the privileges or obligations of marriage is prohibited.”). Reactionary legislators in Pennsylvania have attempted to pass a broadly worded amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution that arguably would be of similar effect. They failed to get it through the legislature in the past, but with Republicans now in control of both houses of the legislature here, reactionary Representative Daryl Metcalfe has been talking about introducing such legislation again this year.

I’m sure that this is only the beginning and that there will be more legislation motivated by antigay animus to come in the next couple of years.

-Tony Infanti

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Hawaii Civil Union Update

The Hawaii House of Representatives yesterday passed a civil unions bill by a vote of 31-19. This comes on the heels of the Senate’s passage of the same basic bill last month. Because the House made some changes to the bill, it must come up for a vote in the Hawaii Senate again, which may happen this week. After that, the bill makes its way to Governor Neil Abercrombie, who, as a civil unions supporter, is expected to sign it.

-Tony Infanti

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New Confessions iPhone App

I love my iPhone. This week, there was quite a buzz about a new app for the iPhone targeted at helping Roman Catholics with the sacrament of confession. A few days ago, Maureen Dowd wrote a whole column about the app in the New York Times. The app has quickly rocketed up the list of top iPhone apps, and when I downloaded it this morning to check it out for myself, it was listed as #34 on the list of Top 50 paid iPhone apps.

The organization Truth Wins Out (TWO) has now condemned the app as a form of antigay bigotry, and the Advocate has a post on its web site about the app and TWO’s reaction to it. From the TWO press release:

“This is cyber spiritual abuse that promotes backward ideas in a modern package,” said Truth Wins Out’s Executive Director, Wayne Besen. “Gay Catholics don’t need to confess, they need to come out of the closet and challenge anti-gay dogma. The false idea that being gay is something to be ashamed of has destroyed too many lives. This iPhone App is facilitating and furthering the harm.”

After reading this, I had to download the app and take a look at it for myself. As someone who was raised Roman Catholic, I have come to expect (from experience) intolerance from the Church. And this app just further confirms that experience. I logged in as a variety of different people (i.e., single adult man, single adult woman, married man, married woman, priest) and walked through the examination of conscience to see what kinds of things it was focusing on. (And it is worth noting that you can always add your own custom questions to the examination of conscience.) The two commandments whose questions really struck me were the fifth and the sixth.

Under the Fifth Commandment (“You shall not kill”), the first question was not whether I had killed or physically harmed anyone (that’s the second question), but whether I had had (for women) or encouraged anyone to have (for men) an abortion. Interestingly, I was also asked whether I had “mutilated myself through any form of sterilization” or had “encouraged or condoned sterilization.” I guess that not procreating at every possible turn results in the death of all those potential lives? In any event, you get a clear sense of the priorities here.

Under the Sixth Commandment (“You shall not commit adultery”), for the single man and single woman, I was first asked whether I have engaged in any sexual activity outside of marriage. OK, why the “outside of marriage” qualifier? Having logged in as “single,” there is no need to limit the question to sexual activity “outside of marriage” because I indicated that I am not married. So, basically, it should just be asking me whether I have engaged in any sexual activity at all. Then, for the sake of what can only be either a prurient interest in the details of my sex life or the advancement of a specific agenda, I am asked specifically whether I have been “guilty of any homosexual activity.” Hence the labeling of this app as antigay.

For the married folks, the first question under the Sixth Commandment is whether I have been faithful to my marriage vows. The next two questions then deal with procreation, asking whether I have used any form of contraception or engaged in sexual acts with my spouse that were not “open to the transmission of new life,” underscoring the importance of the questions regarding sterilization that I was just asked to ponder under the Fifth Commandment.

Of course, even though homosexual activity is just as much adultery as heterosexual activity with someone other than your spouse is–and, therefore, is fully covered by the first question regarding fidelity to one’s marriage vows–there is still a separate question about whether I have been “guilty of any homosexual activity.” Again, this seems like they are just going out of their way to condemn homosexuality and shame gays and lesbians–because we are apparently doubly sinful, needing twice the questions to get at precisely the same sin.

I was also asked under the Sixth Commandment whether I masturbate and whether I am “careful to dress modestly” (for both men and women). Funny, I don’t remember that last one from catechism classes. And, interestingly, I did a quick search for “catholic school girl costume” on Google and the first two ads that were featured at the top of the page were for “sexy” (not Halloween) catholic school girl costumes. The church itself seems to be running into a bit of trouble in observing its own admonition regarding modest dress aimed at promoting chaste thoughts when its own uniforms are a stock sexual fantasy.

The priests get a whole different set of questions. Rather than going commandment by commandment, they go by “responsibilities” (i.e., to God, to promises and vows, to my ministry, to others, to society). The priests are asked a bunch of questions relating to sex: Have I engaged in sexual fantasies? Have I looked at others lustfully? Have I read pornographic literature or looked at pornographic pictures, shows or movies? Have I masturbated? Have I flirted with anyone? Have I lustfully kissed or sexually touched someone? Have I had sexual intercourse?

Notice which question did not appear on this list. There is no question regarding whether the priests have been guilty of homosexual activity. Perhaps given the Church’s efforts to purge gays from the priesthood, they don’t believe there are any left. It seems more likely that they are trying to downplay their presence in the priesthood while, at the same time, highlighting there existence in general society.

I can’t seem to muster up the same outrage to this app that TWO does. But, then, the message sent by this app is in line with everything that I heard growing up in the Church. It probably would have been more remarkable had the app not asked about homosexual activity at all (and, as alluded to above, I think the failure to ask priests this same question speaks volumes all its own).

One thing I do have to give them credit for–under responsibilities to society, a priest is asked whether he has paid his taxes!

-Tony Infanti

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There’s No Sex in Your Violence: Opinion Reveals Minnesota Only Allows Hostile Work Environment Claims Based On Sexual Harassment, Not Gender Discrimination

A female employee brings an action against a school district under the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), alleging hostile work environment based upon gender discrimination. The gravaman of her complaint is that

her male supervisor made sexist statements about the role of women at home and in employment settings. She offered further evidence that the supervisor placed restrictions on the women that did not apply to the men, such as not talking during work, checking in with him before and after breaks, wearing uniforms, and dropping off their personal belongings before clocking in.

This sounds like a pretty hostile work environment to me. Unfortunately, the Court of Appeals of Minnesota disagreed, granting the school district’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint in its recent opinion in LaMont v. Independent School District No. 728, 2011 WL 292131 (Minn.App. 2011). Why?
Continue reading

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Tax Law and the Culture War

U.S. Representative Chris Smith (R-N.J.) recently introduced a bill in Congress titled the “No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion Act.” It is bill number 3 in the House of Representatives. As Representative Smith explains to NPR:

“The fact that it is designated as HR 3 speaks volumes the prioritization by Speaker (John) Boehner and Majority Leader (Eric) Cantor,” said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. Smith is the key sponsor of the bill to write the Hyde language into permanent law. (House leaders give the first handful of bill numbers to measures they want to highlight as legislative priorities.)

So far, the bill has mainly received attention for its exception for women who were the victims of an “act of forcible rape.” But attention has now begun to turn to the tax provisions in the bill (see, e.g., the NPR story mentioned above as well as this editorial in the New York Times and Bridget’s post earlier today–Bridget, you beat me to the punch! I started drafting this post before going off to class and am finishing now that my class is over).

The bill is very broadly worded to disallow a deduction for “amounts paid or incurred for an abortion or for a health benefits plan that includes coverage of abortion.” This language not only prevents a taxpayer from deducting the cost of an abortion paid for out of pocket, but also from deducting the cost of health plans that include coverage of abortion, seemingly without regard to whether the taxpayer can or ever will take advantage of the coverage for abortions. This language is written so broadly that it would seem to deny a deduction for men who purchase a health coverage that includes coverage for abortion, even though they can never undergo the procedure. This limitation is subject to the exception for “forcible rape” as well as exceptions for cases of incest and to prevent the mother’s own death. As Bridget’s post of the NPR story indicates, this will involve the IRS in defining “rape,” “forcible rape,” “incest,” and all of the other terms of the limitation–something that is clearly outside of its ken.

The theory behind disallowing tax deductions and credits relating to abortion is that providing these tax benefits is the equivalent of federal funding of abortion. This, however, is a very selective application of tax expenditure analysis (which, in a nut shell, is the idea that any provision in the Internal Revenue Code that is not directly related to ascertaining one’s net income is really just the equivalent of a disguised direct government spending program).

Why, for example, is similar attention and a high priority not given to the fact that Congress lets businesses deduct the cost of engaging in discrimination? In Rev. Rul. 74-323, for example, the IRS concluded that advertising expenses were deductible as an ordinary and necessary business expense even though the advertising in question arguably violated the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (because punishment under the Act entailed neither criminal liability nor potential loss of license or of the privilege of doing business). Allowing such deductions on the ground that they are “ordinary and necessary business expenses,” as the IRS does in this ruling, is tantamount to the government funding–and, paradoxically, sanctioning–discrimination on the basis of gender (or race or national origin or other protected class status) that it has legally prohibited. Since when is it “ordinary and necessary” for a business to engage in illegal discrimination?

While disturbing on its own, what does this mixed message (i.e., don’t discriminate, but the expenses of discriminating can be an “ordinary and necessary” part of conducting business) say when juxtaposed against the proposed disallowance of a medical expense deduction for abortion?

-Tony Infanti

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Taxing Abortion

From NPR (here):

House Republicans formally launch their latest effort to roll back abortion rights this week, and they’re aiming squarely for the tax code.

On the docket already are two bills: One would make permanent the decades-old “Hyde amendment,” which is currently added every year to federal spending bills and bars most federal abortion funding. The other bill seeks to close what abortion opponents say are “loopholes” in last year’s health overhaul that could permit federal funds to flow for abortions.

But even before the first hearing on the measure, a group of Senate Democrats vowed that if either bill passed the GOP-stacked House, it wouldn’t get through their chamber.

“We’re not going to stand by and watch while reproductive rights are threatened and women’s health is jeopardized again in this country,” said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. “We are not going back in history.”

Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., who has been leading the fight for abortion rights in Congress since she was a House member in the 1980s, said the bills do far more than their sponsors are alleging.

Not only would the bill that seeks to make permanent the Hyde amendment forbid public funding of abortion, she said, “it tells women they can’t use their private money to purchase insurance that covers a full range of health care. It punishes women and businesses with a tax hike — a tax hike — if they wish to keep or buy insurance that covers the full range of reproductive health care.”

That’s because, for the first time, the measure seeks to eliminate some of the tax advantages that come with health insurance if that insurance also covers abortion — tax advantages like being able to buy insurance with pre-tax dollars.

That could affect millions of people because most private insurance covers abortion.

“It is overreaching — an intrusion of the most reprehensible kind,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

But House sponsors, with the strong backing of their leadership, are confident and pushing forward.

“The fact that it is designated as HR 3 speaks volumes the prioritization by Speaker (John) Boehner and Majority Leader (Eric) Cantor,” said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. Smith is the key sponsor of the bill to write the Hyde language into permanent law. (House leaders give the first handful of bill numbers to measures they want to highlight as legislative priorities.)

“I think it says to the world that we are serious; it is time for a national debate on abortion that has never really occurred,” Smith said.

Democrats in the Senate, however, said the public would rather Congress focus on other things.

“This election was about the economy,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y. “So I do not understand how this Republican Congress can move from that mandate to create jobs — to create opportunity in this country — towards how do we undermine women’s reproductive health.”

UPDATE: The House GOP officially kicked off their abortion opposition campaign this afternoon:

“This legislation is really about whether the role of America’s government is to continue to fund a practice that takes the lives of over one million little Americans every year,” said Rep. Trent Franks, R-Ariz., chairman of the Judicicary subcommittee overseeing the bill to make the Hyde amendment permanent at a hearing today.

But going after the tax code could cause all kinds of confusion, testified George Washington University law professor Sara Rosenbaum. For example, she said, the IRS would have to make technical decisions about what types of abortions can and can’t be covered so it can decide what kind of insurance is eligible for tax deductions and credits.

“We’re going to need the Internal Revenue Service to define a rape; potentially a forcible rape, incest; potentially incest involving minors; as opposed to incest not involving minors; physical conditions endangering life, and physical conditions that don’t endanger life,” she said.

Stay tuned, there’s a lot more debate to come.

H/T Francine Lipman

-Bridget Crawford

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Posted in Feminism and Politics, Reproductive Rights | 1 Comment

Record Number of LGBT Asylum Victories, Most from Jamaica

Immigration Equality, a national organization that helps obtain asylum for individuals persecuted in their home country based on their sexual orientation, gender identity or HIV-status, announced today that its legal and pro bono teams won a record 101 cases in 2010. An overwhelming number of those wins – 38 – were for clients from the Caribbean, with 28 of those for individuals from Jamaica. Other cases included 24 asylum seekers from Central and South America; 16 from Eastern Europe (including seven Russian clients); nine from the African continent and five from the Middle East.

“For too many lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, the world remains a dangerous place,” said Rachel B. Tiven, the group’s executive director. “In many cases, the clients who turn to Immigration Equality for help are literally running for their lives. They have been mistreated and beaten by authorities in their home country, disowned by their families and ostracized by society. By offering them safe haven, the United States is not only saving their lives, but benefitting from the talent, skills and service these asylees bring to our country. We are proud, and honored, to help them begin life anew here in their adopted homeland.”

Since the mid-1990s, the United States has recognized persecution due to sexual orientation and gender identity as a basis for seeking asylum. However, the United States immigration law has yet to recognize same sex couples as legitimate marriages that would allow Unites States Citizens and Legal Permanent Residents to file family based petitions on behalf of their spouses. Since January 2010 HIV is no longer a bar to applying for permanent residence.

Read more here.

-Sheila I Vélez Martínez

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Posted in Immigration, LGBT Rights | 1 Comment

Dearth of Women Candidates for Judgeships

For some time now, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette‘s Monday business section has been devoted entirely to law and the legal profession. In this morning’s edition, there was an interesting article about the dearth of women candidates for judgeships on statewide courts in Pennsylvania.

The headline (“As judicial races take shape, few women are candidates”) may not be surprising, especially given the existence of organizations like Emily’s List that devote their efforts to recruiting women candidates for office. Nonetheless, it is worth relaying a few of the numbers before getting to a more interesting aspect of the article. The article reports that there are two vacancies on statewide courts this year–one on the Commonwealth Court, the other on the Superior Court. Only four women have expressed an interest in running for these judgeships, as compared to nine men. More broadly, the article reports that, since 2003, there have been fourteen statewide judicial vacancies–with 20 women and 36 men running for the seats.

What may be surprising is that the dearth of women candidates comes in the face of women’s success in actually winning these races. Of those same fourteen judicial vacancies since 2003, fully eleven were won by women.

Regarding the reasons why fewer women run for judicial office, the article says,

“They’re under-utilized,” Chris Borick, a political scientist and director of the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion, said of women candidates.

“They’ve been targeted by both major parties, because there’s a lot of untapped resources, if you will, within the ranks.” The catch, though, seems to be that women are less inclined to involve themselves with party politics, despite the strong results, Mr. Borick said.

Studies have suggested that women shy away from running for such positions because they are disinterested in the confrontational nature of politics or perceive themselves as not being qualified enough.

“This is their perception,” Mr. Borick said. “The nature of the campaigns, women find unappealing. So, they opt not to join in the race. What you often have is very capable women, for a variety of reasons, opting to never take the chance of running.”

I would be interested in hearing our readers’ thoughts about whether these explanations are sensible or whether there might be other factors at play here.

To conclude this post, it is worth noting that, contrary to the approach of Wikipedia in addressing the lack of women contributors among its ranks, both political parties seem to recognize the need to work hard at recruiting women candidates for statewide judicial office in Pennsylvania:

David E. Landau, the chair of the Delaware County Democratic Party and a partner at Duane Morris, said it’s been a struggle to find women willing to run for political office or a judicial seat.

“But it’s not for a lack of trying,” he said, noting the issue has been a topic of two recent speeches he’s delivered. “It’s something that’s been troubling me. I don’t have an explanation for it.”

Mr. Landau said both parties are searching for answers to the problem. The solution so far, it seems, is to “work harder.”

-Tony Infanti

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Posted in Feminism and Politics | Comments Off on Dearth of Women Candidates for Judgeships