From Contract to Status: Collaboration and the Evolution of Novel Family Relationships

IF 3.4 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Elizabeth S. Scott, R. Scott
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引用次数: 45

Abstract

The past decade has witnessed a dramatic change in public attitudes and legal status for same-sex couples who wish to marry. These events demonstrate that the legal conception of the family is no longer limited to traditional marriage. They also raise the possibility that other relationships — cohabiting couples and their children, voluntary kin groups, multigenerational groups and polygamists — might gain legal recognition as families. This Article probes the challenges faced by aspiring families and the means by which they could attain their goal. It builds on the premise that the state remains committed to social welfare criteria for granting family status, recognizing as families only those categories of relationships that embody a long-term commitment to mutual care and interdependence, and, on that basis, function well to satisfy members’ dependency needs. Groups aspiring to legal recognition as families must overcome substantial uncertainties as to whether they meet these criteria if they are to obtain the rights and obligations of legally recognized families. Uncertainty contributes to a lack of confidence in the durability and effectiveness of novel relationships on the part of the aspiring family members themselves, the larger social community and, ultimately, the state. We develop an informal model to illustrate the nature of these uncertainties, as well as the solutions to the possible obstacles they create. Using a hypothetical group consisting of two adult men and two adult women in a polyamorous relationship, we show how legal family status for novel groups can result from an evolutionary process for overcoming uncertainties that uses collaborative techniques to build trust and confidence. Collaborative processes have been shown in other settings to be effective mechanisms for creating trust incrementally and thus appear to offer a way forward in the evolution of other novel families. We show that the successful movement to achieve marriage rights for LBGT couples has roughly conformed to the collaborative processes we propose, and the absence of meaningful collaboration is one factor explaining the stasis that characterizes the status of unmarried cohabitants. This evidence supports the prediction that the future progress of other aspiring family groups toward attaining legal status may depend on how well they are able to engage the collaborative mechanisms that smooth the path from contract to status.
从契约到地位:新型家庭关系的合作与演化
在过去的十年里,公众对同性伴侣的态度和法律地位发生了巨大变化。这些事件表明,家庭的法律概念不再局限于传统婚姻。他们还提出了其他关系——同居夫妇和他们的孩子、自愿亲属团体、多代人团体和一夫多妻者——可能获得法律承认为家庭的可能性。本文探讨了有抱负的家庭所面临的挑战以及他们实现目标的方法。它建立在这样一个前提之上,即国家仍然致力于给予家庭地位的社会福利标准,只承认那些体现了长期相互照顾和相互依存的承诺,并在此基础上良好地满足成员依赖需求的关系类别为家庭。渴望获得法律承认为家庭的群体如果要获得法律承认的家庭的权利和义务,就必须克服关于它们是否符合这些标准的大量不确定性。不确定性导致对新关系的持久性和有效性缺乏信心,无论是对有抱负的家庭成员本身,还是对更大的社会群体,最终对国家来说都是如此。我们开发了一个非正式的模型来说明这些不确定性的本质,以及它们可能造成的障碍的解决方案。通过一个由两名成年男性和两名成年女性组成的多角恋群体,我们展示了新群体的合法家庭地位是如何从一个克服不确定性的进化过程中产生的,这种进化过程使用协作技术来建立信任和信心。在其他环境中,协作过程已被证明是逐步建立信任的有效机制,因此似乎为其他新型家庭的进化提供了一条前进的道路。我们的研究表明,LBGT夫妇争取婚姻权利的成功运动大致符合我们提出的合作过程,而缺乏有意义的合作是解释未婚同居状态停滞的一个因素。这一证据支持这样一种预测,即其他有抱负的家庭群体在获得合法地位方面的未来进展可能取决于他们能够在多大程度上参与到从合同到地位的顺畅道路上的合作机制中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.90%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Columbia Law Review is one of the world"s leading publications of legal scholarship. Founded in 1901, the Review is an independent nonprofit corporation that produces a law journal edited and published entirely by students at Columbia Law School. It is one of a handful of student-edited law journals in the nation that publish eight issues a year. The Review is the third most widely distributed and cited law review in the country. It receives about 2,000 submissions per year and selects approximately 20-25 manuscripts for publication annually, in addition to student Notes. In 2008, the Review expanded its audience with the launch of Sidebar, an online supplement to the Review.
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