Thursday, November 29, 2012
Courtney Joslin on Marriage, Biology, and Federal Benefits
Courtney G. Joslin
(University of California, Davis – School of Law) has posted Marriage,
Biology, and Federal Benefits on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This Article approaches the
topic of same-sex marriage from a novel perspective by scrutinizing the
historical accuracy of primary defense proffered by same-sex marriage opponents
– “responsible procreation.” In the context of challenges to Section 3 of DOMA,
responsible procreation posits that the federal government’s historic purpose
in extending marital benefits is to single out and specially support families
with biologically-related children. Because same-sex couples cannot fulfill
this long-standing purpose, it is permissible to deny them all federal marital
rights and obligations. While advocates disagree about whether and to what
extent DOMA furthers this alleged federal interest, to date, all sides have
accepted this historical account.
This Article is the first to interrogate the accuracy of this account. To do
so, the Article examines two of the largest and most important federal benefits
programs – Social Security benefits and benefits for active and retired members
of the U.S. military. This analysis demonstrates that Congress has not and does
not condition the receipt of federal family-based benefits on biological
parent-child relationships. To the contrary, Congress long has implicitly and
explicitly extended such benefits to families with children known to be
biologically unrelated to one or both of their parents. This Article thus
reveals that responsible procreation is based on myth, not history and
tradition.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/reproductive_rights/2012/11/courtney-joslin-on-marriage-biology-and-federal-benefits.html