The myth of family law’s inherent localism is sticky. In the past, it was common to hear sweeping claims about the exclusively local nature of all family matters. In response to persuasive critiques, a narrower iteration of family law localism emerged. The new, refined version acknowledges the existence of some federal family law but contends that certain “core” family law matters—specifically, family status determinations—are inherently local. I call this family status localism. Proponents of family status localism rely on history, asserting that the federal government has always deferred to state family status determinations. Family status localism made its most recent appearance (although surely not its last) in the litigation challengin...
ABSTRACT: The article offers an interpretive synthesis of recent scholarship on family law and gover...
Over time, the definition of family has shifted from being premised upon kinship to legal status. I...
This article, contributed to a symposium on “The Family, the State, and American Political Developme...
The myth of family law’s inherent localism is sticky. In the past, it was common to hear sweeping cl...
The principle of federalism in family law is long-established and deeply embedded in the United St...
This Article offers a new perspective on the relationship between family and federalism by analyzing...
This Essay asks: When, as a matter of common sense, experience, and public policy, should family law...
By examining the history of the federal government\u27s role in the regulation of the family, this a...
One of the great complications of the current marriage debates is the way that federalism and confli...
What explains U.S. family law? What are the origins of the current chaos and controversy in the fiel...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
What is the place of the family in legal scholarship and teaching, and in deep, implicit ideas about...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
In upholding Proposition 8 one year after finding that same sex couples had a constitutional right t...
American divorce law was transformed by the Supreme Court in a series of decisions beginning with Wi...
ABSTRACT: The article offers an interpretive synthesis of recent scholarship on family law and gover...
Over time, the definition of family has shifted from being premised upon kinship to legal status. I...
This article, contributed to a symposium on “The Family, the State, and American Political Developme...
The myth of family law’s inherent localism is sticky. In the past, it was common to hear sweeping cl...
The principle of federalism in family law is long-established and deeply embedded in the United St...
This Article offers a new perspective on the relationship between family and federalism by analyzing...
This Essay asks: When, as a matter of common sense, experience, and public policy, should family law...
By examining the history of the federal government\u27s role in the regulation of the family, this a...
One of the great complications of the current marriage debates is the way that federalism and confli...
What explains U.S. family law? What are the origins of the current chaos and controversy in the fiel...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
What is the place of the family in legal scholarship and teaching, and in deep, implicit ideas about...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
In upholding Proposition 8 one year after finding that same sex couples had a constitutional right t...
American divorce law was transformed by the Supreme Court in a series of decisions beginning with Wi...
ABSTRACT: The article offers an interpretive synthesis of recent scholarship on family law and gover...
Over time, the definition of family has shifted from being premised upon kinship to legal status. I...
This article, contributed to a symposium on “The Family, the State, and American Political Developme...