Marriage as a trade: Bridging the private/private distinction
Ertman explores private law's potential to provide a metaphor that accounts for the range of intimate affiliations and counteracts the inequalities of the natural model of family, a socially constructed concept that defines what families should be. The model is often inadequate because it canno...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Harvard civil rights-civil liberties law review 2001-01, Vol.36 (1), p.79-132 |
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description | Ertman explores private law's potential to provide a metaphor that accounts for the range of intimate affiliations and counteracts the inequalities of the natural model of family, a socially constructed concept that defines what families should be. The model is often inadequate because it cannot respond to changing forms of intimate relationships as greater numbers of Americans are living in relationships that do not fit with the naturalized model, including same-sex affiliations, nonsexual unions, interracial relationships, and new parenting relations. |
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ispartof | Harvard civil rights-civil liberties law review, 2001-01, Vol.36 (1), p.79-132 |
issn | 0017-8039 1943-5061 |
language | eng |
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source | PAIS Index; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; HeinOnline Law Journal Library |
subjects | Business Domestic relations (law) Families & family life Husband and wife Law Legal aspects Marriage Marriage law Social aspects Social conditions Social conditions & trends Social policy Social sciences Social values United States |
title | Marriage as a trade: Bridging the private/private distinction |
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