Long before the Supreme Court’s seminal parenting cases took a due process Lochnerian turn, American courts had been working to fashion family law doctrine on the premise that parents are only entrusted with custody of the child, and then only as long as they meet their fiduciary duty to take proper care of the child. With its progressive, anti-patriarchal orientation, this jurisprudence was in part a creature of its time, reflecting the evolutionary biases of the emerging fields of sociology, anthropology, and legal ethnohistory. In short, the courts embraced the new, “scientific” view that social “progress” entails the decline and, by some accounts, the demise of parental authority. The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries witnessed the em...
Although legal scholars often assume that the history of children\u27s rights in the United States d...
This Article examines, in three parts, the transformation of childhood, and the law\u27s complicated...
What is the place of the family in legal scholarship and teaching, and in deep, implicit ideas about...
Long before the Supreme Court’s seminal parenting cases took a due process Lochnerian turn, American...
This article examines the significance of the United States Supreme Court decisions in Meyer v. Nebr...
textWith increasing frequency, the United States Supreme Court has faced questions pertaining to the...
Cases targeting family regulation in the 1970s turned, for the first time, on three contrasting and ...
This article focuses on the shift from a world in which domestic relations are founded in a hierarch...
Most theories of parentage fail to explain the genesis of the right to parent - for example, why doe...
In a series of cases in the 1920s, the Supreme Court affirmed a fundamental right of parents to dire...
There is an extensive scholarship on separate spheres, the public/private binary, and family history...
For more than a century the Supreme Court of the United States has championed family as an instituti...
This article is concerned with understanding the historical and theoretical origins of the concepts ...
This Article examines two domains of family law, each of which seems to threaten or challenge (depen...
This article attempts to show that the inter-spousal custody cases of the nineteenth century created...
Although legal scholars often assume that the history of children\u27s rights in the United States d...
This Article examines, in three parts, the transformation of childhood, and the law\u27s complicated...
What is the place of the family in legal scholarship and teaching, and in deep, implicit ideas about...
Long before the Supreme Court’s seminal parenting cases took a due process Lochnerian turn, American...
This article examines the significance of the United States Supreme Court decisions in Meyer v. Nebr...
textWith increasing frequency, the United States Supreme Court has faced questions pertaining to the...
Cases targeting family regulation in the 1970s turned, for the first time, on three contrasting and ...
This article focuses on the shift from a world in which domestic relations are founded in a hierarch...
Most theories of parentage fail to explain the genesis of the right to parent - for example, why doe...
In a series of cases in the 1920s, the Supreme Court affirmed a fundamental right of parents to dire...
There is an extensive scholarship on separate spheres, the public/private binary, and family history...
For more than a century the Supreme Court of the United States has championed family as an instituti...
This article is concerned with understanding the historical and theoretical origins of the concepts ...
This Article examines two domains of family law, each of which seems to threaten or challenge (depen...
This article attempts to show that the inter-spousal custody cases of the nineteenth century created...
Although legal scholars often assume that the history of children\u27s rights in the United States d...
This Article examines, in three parts, the transformation of childhood, and the law\u27s complicated...
What is the place of the family in legal scholarship and teaching, and in deep, implicit ideas about...