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Full-Text Articles in Law

Laboratories Of Constitutionality: How State High Courts Paved The Way For Federal Courts To Invalidate Prohibitions On Same-Sex Marriage, Tyler T. Rosenbaum Aug 2009

Laboratories Of Constitutionality: How State High Courts Paved The Way For Federal Courts To Invalidate Prohibitions On Same-Sex Marriage, Tyler T. Rosenbaum

Tyler T Rosenbaum

This article looks at the opinions of the state high courts that have adjudicated the constitutionality under their state constitutions of prohibitions on same-sex marriage and, given the extent to which the state high courts deferred to Supreme Court case law in interpreting their own constitutions, concludes that a federal court would be more likely than not to find that such prohibitions violate the United States Constitution.

With respect to a claimed substantive due process right to same-sex marriage, the Supreme Court’s ruling in Lawrence v. Texas undermined much of the precedent that would have required a careful, tradition-bound analysis. …


Interstate Marriage Recognition And The Right To Travel, Mark Strasser Jul 2009

Interstate Marriage Recognition And The Right To Travel, Mark Strasser

Mark Strasser

Historically, states were forced decide whether to recognize a marriage, valid where celebrated, that could not have been celebrated locally. As a general rule, non-incestuous, non-polygamous marriages that were valid in the domicile at the time of celebration were treated as valid everywhere, although courts split with respect to how to apply the rule to interracial marriages. Yet, these marriage recognition practices occurred in a context where it was believed that the United States Constitution imposed no limitations on the ability of states to refuse to recognize a marriage validly celebrated elsewhere. This article examines interstate marriage recognition practices, and …


Legal Regulation Of Marriage: From Status To Contract And Back Again?, Jana B. Singer May 2009

Legal Regulation Of Marriage: From Status To Contract And Back Again?, Jana B. Singer

Jana B. Singer

The purpose of this paper is to give a brief historical overview of the way in which the American legal system has traditionally regulated marriage.


Alimony And Efficiency: The Gendered Costs And Benefits Of Economic Justification For Alimony, Jana B. Singer May 2009

Alimony And Efficiency: The Gendered Costs And Benefits Of Economic Justification For Alimony, Jana B. Singer

Jana B. Singer

No abstract provided.


Behavioral Economic Issues In American And Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg Mar 2009

Behavioral Economic Issues In American And Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg

Ryan M. Riegg

Unlike previous work examining marriage and divorce law from an economic perspective, this article critiques traditional economic theory, which frequently fails to address issues like "trust" and “trustworthiness” in the forming of contractual and marital relationships, as well as a number of rules within the modern American marriage and divorce system. Additionally, the article also demonstrates how a number of rules within both marriage and divorce systems can be better understood and evaluated from a behavioral economic perspective and suggests how those legal systems may be developed in the future.
The practical implications of this article are threefold. First, it …


Australian Marriage Law From A Biblical Perspective, Neil J. Foster Jan 2009

Australian Marriage Law From A Biblical Perspective, Neil J. Foster

Neil J Foster

This paper discusses aspects of the Australian law of marriage from a Biblical perspective. It concludes that the definition of marriage in the law of Australia is quite consistent with the definition adopted by the Bible, and also discusses how Christians ought to view marriage under the law of Australia.


Moving Beyond The 'Immutability Debate' In The Fight For Equality After, M. Katherine B. Darmer Jan 2009

Moving Beyond The 'Immutability Debate' In The Fight For Equality After, M. Katherine B. Darmer

M. Katherine B. Darmer

On May 15, 2008, the California Supreme Court issued its historic decision regarding marriage rights for same-sex couples. In the course of its opinion, the court found that classifications based upon sexual orientation are subject to the protections of "strict scrutiny" for purposes of the state's equal protection clause. The court also found that marriage is a fundamental right that extends to same-sex couples.

On November 4, 2008, 52% of California voters voted for Proposition 8, which purported to "amend" the state constitution by adding fourteen words in a new clause following the equal protection clause: "only marriage between a …


Gay Equality, Religious Liberty, And The First Amendment, Matthew J. Murray Jan 2009

Gay Equality, Religious Liberty, And The First Amendment, Matthew J. Murray

Matthew Murray

Are gay rights laws and religious liberty fundamentally in conflict? Would legal recognition of same-sex marriage lead to a wave of litigation threatening the religious liberty of those who object to such unions on religious grounds? Opponents of same-sex marriage have vocally asserted as much. This Article argues, however, that modifications in civil marriage laws in fact pose little to no threat to the liberty of religious objectors. Rather, the real arena of potential conflict between religious liberty and gay equality arises in the context of sexual orientation nondiscrimination laws. But these tensions are not new. The courts should be …


The Discourse Of "Contract" And The Law Of Marriage, Thomas W. Joo Dec 2008

The Discourse Of "Contract" And The Law Of Marriage, Thomas W. Joo

Thomas W Joo

Marriage is often compared to a "contract." While this analogy bases the law of marriage on a presumed settled concept called "contract," it rests in fact on a contested view of "contract": that legitimate obligation must derive from consent. This focus on consent ignores another, contradictory, strand of contract law that imposes obligations without consent. The pervasiveness of the consent-centered "contract" analogy affects our understanding of "contract" as much as it affects our understanding of marriage.


Money Matters In Marriage: Unmasking Interdependence In Ongoing Spousal Economic Relations, Alicia B. Kelly Dec 2008

Money Matters In Marriage: Unmasking Interdependence In Ongoing Spousal Economic Relations, Alicia B. Kelly

Alicia B. Kelly

This Article presents a rare exploration of the interactions among money, marriage and law while the relationship is ongoing. Using insights on the relational landscape from the social sciences as a lens, I examine the law’s regulation of spousal economic relations and its account of and potential impact within a functioning marriage. Building on my previous work, my claim is that the law governing money in marriage should be grounded on a distinctive and clarified model of partnership marriage that understands the relationship to be of equal persons who join forces to share the burdens and benefits of a shared …