Beyond Same-Sex Marriage
Perspectives on Marital Possibilities- Editors:
- Publisher:
- 2016
Summary
Although the debate over same-sex marriage in the United States has ended, no one seems to know what lies on the horizon. The conversation about what marriage could be like in the future is no longer confined to academics. In his dissent in Obergefell, Chief Justice Roberts linked the constitutionally-mandated legal recognition of same-sex marriage to the possibility that states may also have to recognize multi-person intimate relationships as well to avoid discriminating against plural marriage enthusiasts. The popularity of television shows like TLC’s Sister Wives and HBO’s Big Love suggests that Americans no longer can be dismissive of the possibility that in the foreseeable future, marriage could, and perhaps should, look very different than it does today.
Rather than settling the question of whether states ought to abolish marriage, make it more inclusive, contractual, or call it something else, this book exposes readers to some of the normative, legal, and empirical questions that Americans must address before they can deliberate thoughtfully about whether to keep the marital status quo where monogamy remains privileged. Unlike much of the debate over same-sex marriage, they exchange reasons with one another as they discuss marital reform. This book is for ordinary Americans, their elected representatives, and judges, to help them ultimately decide whether they want to continue to define marriage so narrowly, make it more inclusive to avoid discrimination, or have the state leave the marriage business. This edited, interdisciplinary volume contains eight original contributions, all of which illuminate important but often neglected areas of the topic.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2016
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4985-1201-5
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4985-1202-2
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 247
- Product type
- Edited Book
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Foreword No access
- Introduction No access Pages 1 - 6
- Chapter One: Obergefell and the Liberal Case Against Civil Marriage No access Pages 7 - 24
- Chapter Two: Progressive Polygamy in Western United States No access Pages 25 - 40
- Chapter Three: Plural Marriage, Exemptions, and the Redundancy of the Free Exercise Clause No access Pages 41 - 62
- Chapter Four: Robotic Marriage and the Law No access Pages 63 - 82
- Chapter Five: A Friendship Model of Sex, Polyamory, and Plural Marriage No access Pages 83 - 102
- Chapter Six: Public Reason, Liberal Neutrality, and Marriage No access Pages 103 - 128
- Chapter Seven: The Dialectic of Islam and Polygyny No access Pages 129 - 146
- Chapter Eight: The Need for a Sociological Perspective on Polyamory No access Pages 147 - 166
- Chapter Nine: Scrutinizing Polygamy: Utah’s Brown v. Buhman and British Columbia’s Reference Re: Section 293 No access Pages 167 - 204
- Chapter Ten: The Paradox of Big Love in the Liberal State: Treating Adults like Children and Children like Adults No access Pages 205 - 234
- Index No access Pages 235 - 244
- About the Contributors No access Pages 245 - 247





