America's war on same-sex couples and their families :and how the courts rescued them
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2017Description: xiii, 330pISBN:- 9781107559004 (paper back)
- 316.811.115:34 PIN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | School of Legal studies | 316.811.115:34 PIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | SLS031277 |
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316.472.4.34 GEO Social media and the law | 316.472.4:34 STE Social media and the law | 316.474.4 KEE Community informatics | 316.811.115:34 PIN America's war on same-sex couples and their families | 316D Code of criminal procedure, 1973 | 317;1 Benami transactions (prohibition) Act 1988 with ordinance-1988 | 32 RAT Principles of Political Theory And Organisaton |
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction; 2. State judicial interpretations of super-DOMAs; 3. The effects of super-DOMAs on same-sex couples; 4. The effects of super-DOMAs on families with children being raised by same-sex couples; 5. Super-DOMAs and LGBT migration: fight or flight?; 6. How the federal courts rescued same-sex couples and their families; 7. Conclusion.
"America's War on Same-Sex Couples and Their Families is a legal, political, and social history of constitutional amendments in twenty American states (with 43 percent of the nation's population) that prohibited government recognition of all forms of relationship rights (marriage, civil unions, and domestic partnerships) for same-sex couples. Based on 175 interviews with gay and lesbian pairs in Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin, the volume has great human-interest value and chronicles how same-sex couples and their children coped within harsh legal environments. The work ends with a lively explanation of how the federal judiciary rescued these families from their own governments. In addition, the book provides a model of the grassroots circumstances under which harassed minority groups migrate out of oppressive state regimes, together with an estimate of the economic and other costs (to the refugees and their governments) of the flight from persecution"--
"America's War on Same-Sex Couples and Their Families is a legal, political, and social history of constitutional amendments in twenty American states (with 43 percent of the nation's population) that prohibited government recognition of all forms of relationship rights (marriage, civil unions, and domestic partnerships) for same-sex couples. Based on 175 interviews with gay and lesbian pairs in Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin, the volume has great human-interest value and chronicles how samesex couples and their children coped within harsh legal environments"--
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