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Gay and Lesbian Families

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Title: Gay and Lesbian Families


1
Gay and Lesbian Families
2
What is a Gay/Lesbian Family?
  • Families with only Gay/Lesbian Members
  • Families with some Gay/Lesbian Members (whether
    they accept them or not)
  • Families that embrace their Gay/Lesbian Members
  • Families that support a Gay/Lesbian Rights Agenda

3
Gay and Lesbian Parents-Not a New Phenomenon
  • Living as straight (even to selves)
  • Living in the Closet (out to selves and maybe a
    select few)
  • Living out-
  • Formerly married, adopting of new partners
    children from former relationships

4
The Marriage Question
  • Marriage is a powerful legal and social
    institution that protects and supports intimate
    family relationships by providing a unique set of
    rights, privileges, and benefits.
  • Same-sex couples are currently denied the right
    to legally marry anywhere in the United States.
  • In Vermont, same-sex couples can have civil
    unions, which confer many of the benefits of
    marriage to couples who are residents. However,
    these unions are not recognized outside of
    Vermont.

5
Canadas Example
  • In 2002, a three-judge panel of the Ontario
    Superior Court decided that granting marriage
    licenses only to heterosexual couples violates
    Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
  • The court also ordered the federal Parliament to
    officially redefine "marriage" within the next
    two years. Current federal law defines marriage
    as "a union between one man and one woman to the
    exclusion of all others."

6
The Canadian Example- The Plantiffs
  • "We're no longer second-class citizens in this
    country, and the time has come for a change," Joe
    Varnell, one of the plaintiffs who sued the
    Ontario government for the right to marry another
    man, said after the ruling. "My relationship is
    validated, and nobody can say we're not a real
    family anymore."

7
How Does the Canadian Decision Impact the United
States?
  • Will we be required to recognize foreign same sex
    marriages?
  • as a general rule, most foreign marriages
    historically have been respected (that is,
    treated as valid) for most purposes in the United
    States if they were validly entered in the
    country where the couple married under what are
    known as "principles of comity.
  • This is a flexible doctrine that says that
    countries generally should respect the legal acts
    of other countries because its important that
    other countries be willing to respect your own
    country's legal acts, and because people should
    not have to worry about whether another country
    won't do so, as they cross borders.

8
Will the United States Recognize Gay Marriages?
  • Break into groups of 4.
  • Discuss this issue.
  • What can you conclude?

9
The Defense of Marriage Act
  • In 1996, the "Defense of Marriage Act" (DOMA) was
    passed - limiting the federal definition of
    marriage to exclude same-sex couples. Many states
    have passed similar legislation, further denying
    same-sex couples the protections and recognition
    that heterosexual couples receive.

10
Defense of Marriage Act- May 8, 1996
  • Section 7- In determining the meaning of any act
    of Congress, or of any ruling, regulation, or
    interpretation of the various administrative
    bureaus and agencies of the United States, the
    word marriage means only a legal union between
    one man and one woman as husband and wife, and
    the word spouse refers only to a person of the
    opposite sex who is a husband or a wife.
  • -Section 1738B- No state, territory, or
    possession of the United States, or Indian tribe,
    shall be required to give effect to any public
    act, record, or judicial proceeding of any other
    state, territory, possession, or tribe respecting
    a relationship between persons of the same sex
    that is treated as a marriage under the laws of
    such other State, territory, possession, or
    tribe, or a right or claim arising form such
    relationship.

11
Because lesbians and gays cannot marry, they have
no right to
  • Accidental death benefit for the surviving spouse
    of a government employee
  • Appointment as guardian of a minor
  • Award of child custody in divorce proceedings
  • Beneficial owner status of corporate securities
  • Bill of Rights benefits for victims and
    witnesses
  • Burial of service member's dependents
  • Certificates of occupation
  • Consent to post-mortem examination
  • Continuation of rights under existing homestead
    leases
  • Control, division, acquisition, and disposition
    of community property
  • Criminal injuries compensation

12
  • Death benefit for surviving spouse for government
    employee
  • Disclosure of vital statistics records
  • Division of property after dissolution of
    marriage
  • Eligibility for housing opportunity allowance
    program of the Housing, Finance and Development
    Corporation
  • Exemption from claims of Department of Human
    Services for social services payments, financial
    assistance, or burial payments
  • Exemption from conveyance tax
  • Exemption from regulation of condominium sales to
    owner-occupants
  • Funeral leave for government employees
  • Homes of totally disabled veterans exempt from
    property taxes
  • Income tax deductions, credits, rates exemption,
    and estimates
  • Inheritance of land patents

13
  • Insurance licenses, coverage, eligibility, and
    benefits organization of mutual benefits society
  • Legal status with partners children
  • Making, revoking, and objecting to anatomical
    gifts
  • Making partner medical decisions
  • Nonresident tuition deferential waiver
  • Notice of guardian ad litem proceedings
  • Notice of probate proceedings
  • Payment of wages to a relative of deceased
    employee
  • Payment of worker's compensation benefits after
    death
  • Permission to make arrangements for burial or
    cremation

14
  • Proof of business partnership
  • Public assistance from the Department of Human
    Services
  • Qualification at a facility for the elderly
  • Real property exemption from attachment or
    execution
  • Right of survivorship to custodial trust
  • Right to be notified of parole or escape of
    inmate
  • Right to change names
  • Right to enter into pre-marital agreement
  • Right to file action for nonsupport
  • Right to inherit property
  • Right to purchase leases and cash freehold
    agreements concerning the management and
    disposition of public land
  • Right to sue for tort and death by wrongful act
  • Right to support after divorce
  • Right to support from spouse
  • Rights and proceedings for involuntary
    hospitalization and treatment

15
  • Rights by way of dour or courtesy
  • Rights to notice, protection, benefits, and
    inheritance under the uniform probate code
  • Sole interest in property
  • Spousal privilege and confidential marriage
    communications
  • Spousal immigration benefits
  • Status of children
  • Support payments in divorce action
  • Tax relief for natural disaster losses
  • Vacation allowance on termination of public
    employment by death
  • Veterans' preference to spouse in public
    employment
  • In vitro fertilization coverage
  • Waiver of fees for certified copies and searches
    of vital statistics.

16
Cultural Variation
  • There is a wide range of variation in how
    sexuality is regarded.
  • How the individual is regarded varies widely as
    well.
  • A few examples follow.

17
The Aleut and Kodiak Islanders
  • Among the Aleut and Kodiak Islanders in Southern
    Alaska, for example, a Russian explorer in 1812
    described berdaches, called shopan or achnucke,
    as respected shamans. A Koniag who has an
    Achnucek instead of a wife is regarded as lucky.
    A father or a mother design a son for an Achnucek
    from his infancy, if he seems to them to resemble
    a girl. Kodiak parents would select their most
    handsome and promising boy to raise as feminine.
    His hair was styled like a womans, he was
    dressed in womens clothing, and any facial hair
    was carefully plucked out. At the age of ten to
    fifteen years, he would be married to a wealthy
    man. The husband regarded his boy-wife as a
    major social accomplishment, and the boys family
    benefited from association with their new wealthy
    in-law. Since the boy was treated with great
    respect, this practice seemed to provide a
    no-lose situation for easy social mobility among
    Aleut and Kodiak families.

18
The Lache Indians of Colombia
  • It was a law among them that if a woman bore
    five consecutive male children, without giving
    birth to a female, they could make a female of
    one of the sons, when he reached the age of
    twelve that is to say, the could rear him as a
    woman and teach him the habits of a woman,
    bringing him up in that wise. In their bodily
    form and manners they appeared so perfectly to be
    women that no one who beheld them could
    distinguish them from the others, and these were
    known as cusmos and they performed womanly tasks
    with the strength of men, as a result of which,
    when they had attained the proper age, they were
    given in wedlock as women. And indeed the Laches
    preferred them to true women, whereby it follows
    that the abomination of sodomy was freely
    permitted. (As described by a Spanish explorer)

19
Navaho and Lakota Examples
  • Williams reports on Navahos the Nadle (man
    woman) are high status individuals. Nadles are
    seen as compassionate and kind, so if a Nadle
    takes an interest in your child, it is
    flattering. They are seen as loving toward
    children, and good parents- since adoption of
    children is common in most American Indian
    societies, Nadle and others in other Nations
    often adopt children
  • Ie. Terry Calling Eagle, a Lakota Berdache has
    adopted and raised seven orphaned children.

20
The United States Today
  • According to the American Psychological
    Association, "More and more lesbian women and gay
    men are choosing to parent. They are adopting
    children, becoming foster parents, having
    biological children through donor insemination,
    etc., either as single parents or with other gay
    or lesbian co-parents." (Lesbian and Gay
    Parenting A Resource for Psychologists, 1995.)

21
Gay/Lesbian Parenting in the United States Today
  • Bisexual and transgender people are also making
    choices to maintain or expand their families.
    While there have always been GLBT parents, there
    has been a recent increase in the number of GLBT
    people who are making that choice and who are
    being visible about it.
  • For many years, people assumed that if someone
    was homosexual, bisexual or transgender, they
    either didn't want to or couldn't become parents.
    This is not true. GLBT people are just like
    everyone else - some want to have children and
    some don't. But being gay, lesbian, bisexual or
    transgender is quickly becoming less of a barrier
    to starting a family.

22
Gay/Lesbian Parenting
  • For much of GLBT history, parenting was possible
    only if you engaged in a heterosexual
    relationship or marriage.
  • GLBT parents had to chose between coming out of
    the closet and losing their family, or staying
    closeted and denying their true selves.
  • Now, people who come out in heterosexual
    marriages are able to maintain a relationship
    with their children, while being honest with
    themselves.
  • At the same time, thanks to medical advances and
    progressive adoption laws, GLBT couples or
    singles can decide to become parents on their
    own.

23
View Daddy and Papa
  • While Viewing the film ask yourself
  • What obstacles to they face that other parents
    dont face?
  • How do others react to their choices?
  • How do cultural stereotypes inform reactions?

24
Research on Gay/Lesbian Parents
  • There is no evidence that GLBT people are not
    good parents, or that there are negative
    emotional or psychological impacts on their
    children.
  • On the contrary, studies have consistently shown
    that there are no differences in the emotional
    and psychological development between children
    with gay parents or children with heterosexual
    parents. (See the American Psychological
    Association report.)
  • There are some negative costs for children of
    GLBT parents, but they come from others
  • Unfortunately, young children and teens of GLBT
    parents are subject to anti-gay teasing and
    harassment, regardless of their own sexual
    orientation.

25
Research on Gay/Lesbian Parents
  • Like families headed by heterosexual parents,
    lesbian and gay parents and their children are a
    diverse group (Martin, 1993).
  • Negative outcomes such as loss of physical
    custody, restrictions on visitation, and
    prohibitions against adoption are additional
    burdens faced by Gay and Lesbian Parents (Falk,
    1989 Editors of the Harvard Law Review, 1990).
  • As with all socially stigmatized groups, the
    beliefs held generally in society about lesbians
    and gay men are often not based in personal
    experience, but are instead culturally
    transmitted (Herek, 1991).

26
Understanding the Research
  • Systematic research comparing lesbian and gay
    adults to heterosexual adults only began in the
    late 1950s, and research comparing children of
    gay and lesbian parents with those of
    heterosexual parents is of a more recent vintage.
  • Research on lesbian and gay adults began with
    Evelyn Hooker's landmark study (1957) and
    culminated with the declassification of
    homosexuality as a mental disorder in 1973
    (Gonsiorek, 1991).
  • Case reports on children of gay and lesbian
    parents began to appear in the psychiatric
    literature in the early 1970s (e.g., Osman, 1972
    Weeks, Derdeyn, Langman, 1975) and have
    continued to appear (e.g., Agbayewa, 1984).

27
Stereotypes and Assumptions
  • One belief that often underlies both judicial
    decision-making in custody litigation and public
    policies governing foster care and adoption has
    been the belief that lesbians and gay men are not
    fit to be parents.
  • In particular, courts have sometimes assumed that
    gay men and lesbians are mentally ill, that
    lesbians are less maternal than heterosexual
    women, and that lesbians' and gay men's
    relationships with sexual partners leave little
    time for ongoing parent-child interactions
    (Editors of the Harvard Law Review, 1990).
    Results of research to date have failed to
    confirm any of these beliefs (Falk, 1989, 1994
    Patterson, 1994b, 1995b, 1996).

28
Not a Mental Disease/Defect
  • The psychiatric, psychological, and social-work
    professions do not consider homosexual
    orientation to be a mental disorder. More than 20
    years ago, the American Psychiatric Association
    removed "homosexuality" from its list of mental
    disorders, stating that "homosexuality per se
    implies no impairment in judgment, stability,
    reliability, or general social or vocational
    capabilities" (American Psychiatric Association,
    1980).
  • In 1975, the American Psychological Association
    took the same position and urged all mental
    health professionals to help dispel the stigma of
    mental illness that had long been associated with
    homosexual orientation (American Psychological
    Association, 1975). The National Association of
    Social Workers has a similar policy (National
    Association of Social Workers, 1994).

29
Parental Fitness
  • Lesbian and heterosexual women have not been
    found to differ markedly either in their overall
    mental health or in their approaches to child
    rearing
  • Recent evidence suggests that lesbian couples who
    are parenting together tend to divide household
    and family labor relatively evenly and to report
    satisfaction with their couple relationships.
    Research on gay fathers has similarly found no
    reason to believe them unfit as parents.

30
Fears About Gay and Lesbian Parents
  • In addition to judicial concerns about gay and
    lesbian parents themselves, courts have voiced
    three major kinds of fears about effects of
    lesbian or gay parents on children.
  • 1) Gender Identity Issues
  • 2) Childs Personal Development
  • 3) Difficulty in Social Relations

31
Gender Identity Issues
  • The first general concern is that development of
    sexual identity will be impaired among children
    of lesbian or gay parents. For instance, that
    children brought up by gay fathers or lesbian
    mothers will show disturbances in gender identity
    and/or in gender role behavior.
  • It has also been suggested that children brought
    up by lesbian mothers or gay fathers will
    themselves become gay or lesbian.
  • No evidence supports either concern.

32
Child Personal Development
  • A second category of concerns involves aspects of
    children's personal development other than sexual
    identity.
  • For example, courts have expressed fears that
    children in the custody of gay or lesbian parents
    will be more vulnerable to mental breakdown, will
    exhibit more adjustment difficulties and behavior
    problems, and will be less psychologically
    healthy than children growing up in homes with
    heterosexual parents.
  • No Evidence appears to support such fears.

33
Difficulty in Social Relations
  • A third category of specific fears expressed by
    the courts is that children of lesbian and gay
    parents may experience difficulties in social
    relationships.
  • For example, judges have repeatedly expressed
    concern that children living with lesbian mothers
    may be stigmatized, teased, or otherwise
    traumatized by peers. Another common fear is that
    children living with gay or lesbian parents may
    be more likely to be sexually abused by the
    parent or by the parent's friends or
    acquaintances.
  • No evidence supports the belief that gays are
    lesbians are more likely to abuse children.
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