State-Sponsored Homophobia

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

State-Sponsored Homophobia STATE-SPONSORED HOMOPHOBIA A WORLD SURVEY OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION LAWS: CRIMINALISATION, PROTECTION AND RECOGNITION 12TH EDITION MAY 2017 AENGUS CARROLL AND LUCAS RAMÓN MENDOS ilga.org This 12th edition of State Sponsored Homophobia report was researched and written by Aengus Carroll and Lucas Ramón Mendos and published by ILGA. It is copyright-free provided you cite both the author and the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA). Suggested citation: International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association: Carroll, A. and Mendos, L.R., State Sponsored Homophobia 2017: A world survey of sexual orientation laws: criminalisation, protection and recognition (Geneva; ILGA, May 2017). This report is available to download in Word or PDF formats. Digital versions of the four ILGA maps of LGB legislation in the world are available for print. State-Sponsored Homophobia and its world maps are published simultaneously in English and Spanish, and will be available in Arabic, Chinese, French and Russian. Download the maps and reports at http://ilga.org or contact [email protected] Coordination: Renato Sabbadini Design and typesetting: Renné Ramos Maps: Eduardo Enoki STATE-SPONSORED HOMOPHOBIA - MAY 2017 CONTENT FOREWORD: CO-SECRETARIES-GENERAL: RUTH BALDACCHINO AND HELEN KENNEDY ............................................................................5 AUTHORS’ PREFACE: AENGUS CARROLL AND LUCAS RAMÓN MENDOS ...............................................................................................................7 STRENGTHENING SOGI PROTECTION AND UNPACKING INTERSECTIONALITY AT THE UNITED NATIONS IN 2016: ANDRÉ DU PLESSIS, DIANA CAROLINA PRADO MOSQUERA AND KSENIYA KIRICHENKO ............................................................ 13 LGB LEGISLATION GLOBAL OVERVIEW ..................................................................................25 SAME-SEX SEXUAL ACTS LEGAL .................................................26 HATE CRIMES BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION SAME-SEX SEXUAL ACTS ILLEGAL ...................................................37 CONSIDERED AN AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCE .........................60 SAME-SEX SEXUAL ACTS - DEATH PENALTY ................................40 INCITEMENT TO HATRED BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION PROHIBITED ...............................................................63 PROMOTION (‘PROPAGANDA’) AND ‘MORALITY’ LAWS ...............41 BAN ON ‘CONVERSION THERAPIES’ .................................................67 BARRIERS TO SOGI NGOS ...................................................................46 MARRIAGE OPEN FOR SAME-SEX COUPLES ...................................68 CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITION OF DISCRIMINATION SPECIFYING SEXUAL ORIENTATION .................................................46 PARTNERSHIP RECOGNITION FOR SAME-SEX COUPLES ..............70 PROHIBITION OF DISCRIMINATION IN EMPLOYMENT JOINT ADOPTION BY SAME-SEX COUPLES ....................................73 BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION ....................................................48 SECOND PARENT ADOPTION ..............................................................75 CRIMINALISATION ...................................................................................................................79 AFRICA .....................................................................................................................................81 ALGERIA .................................................................................................81 MAURITIUS ............................................................................................95 ANGOLA .................................................................................................81 MOROCCO ..............................................................................................95 BOTSWANA ............................................................................................82 NAMIBIA .................................................................................................95 BURUNDI ...............................................................................................83 NIGERIA .................................................................................................96 CAMEROON ...........................................................................................84 SENEGAL ...............................................................................................97 COMOROS ..............................................................................................84 SIERRA LEONE ......................................................................................98 EGYPT ....................................................................................................85 SOMALIA ................................................................................................98 ERITREA .................................................................................................86 SOUTH SUDAN ......................................................................................99 ETHIOPIA ...............................................................................................87 SUDAN ................................................................................................. 100 GAMBIA ..................................................................................................88 SWAZILAND ........................................................................................ 100 GHANA ...................................................................................................89 TANZANIA ........................................................................................... 101 GUINEA ..................................................................................................90 KENYA ....................................................................................................90 TOGO ................................................................................................... 102 LIBERIA ..................................................................................................91 TUNISIA ............................................................................................... 103 LIBYA ......................................................................................................92 UGANDA ............................................................................................. 104 MALAWI .................................................................................................93 ZAMBIA ............................................................................................... 105 MAURITANIA .........................................................................................94 ZIMBABWE ......................................................................................... 106 AMERICAS ..............................................................................................................................108 ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA................................................................. 108 JAMAICA ............................................................................................. 114 BARBADOS ......................................................................................... 109 ST KITTS & NEVIS .............................................................................. 116 DOMINICA ........................................................................................... 110 ST LUCIA ............................................................................................. 117 GRENADA ............................................................................................ 111 ST VINCENT & THE GRENADINES................................................... 118 GUYANA .............................................................................................. 112 TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO .................................................................. 119 STATE-SPONSORED HOMOPHOBIA - MAY 2017 ASIA .......................................................................................................................................121 AFGHANISTAN ................................................................................... 121 MYANMAR .......................................................................................... 132 BANGLADESH .................................................................................... 121 OMAN .................................................................................................. 133 BHUTAN .............................................................................................. 122 PAKISTAN ............................................................................................ 133 BRUNEI DARUSSALAM ..................................................................... 123 QATAR .................................................................................................. 134 GAZA (IN THE OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY) ................ 124 SAUDI ARABIA ................................................................................... 135 INDIA ................................................................................................... 124 SINGAPORE ........................................................................................ 136 INDONESIA (SOUTH SUMATRA AND ACEH PROVINCE) ............. 125 SRI LANKA .........................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Age and Sexual Consent
    Per Se or Power? Age and Sexual Consent Joseph J. Fischel* ABSTRACT: Legal theorists, liberal philosophers, and feminist scholars have written extensively on questions surrounding consent and sexual consent, with particular attention paid to the sorts of conditions that validate or vitiate consent, and to whether or not consent is an adequate metric to determine ethical and legal conduct. So too, many have written on the historical construction of childhood, and how this concept has influenced contemporary legal culture and more broadly informed civil society and its social divisions. Far less has been written, however, on a potent point of contact between these two fields: age of consent laws governing sexual activity. Partially on account of this under-theorization, such statutes are often taken for granted as reflecting rather than creating distinctions between adults and youth, between consensual competency and incapacity, and between the time for innocence and the time for sex. In this Article, I argue for relatively modest reforms to contemporary age of consent statutes but propose a theoretic reconstruction of the principles that inform them. After briefly historicizing age of consent statutes in the United States (Part I), I assert that the concept of sexual autonomy ought to govern legal regulations concerning age, age difference, and sexual activity (Part II). A commitment to sexual autonomy portends a lowered age of sexual consent, decriminalization of sex between minors, heightened legal supervision focusing on age difference and relations of dependence, more robust standards of consent for sex between minors and between minors and adults, and greater attention to the ways concerns about age, age difference, and sex both reflect and displace more normatively apt questions around gender, gendered power and submission, and queer sexuality (Part III).
    [Show full text]
  • Child Notice Afghanistan
    Child Notice Afghanistan 2018 UNICEF The Netherlands UNICEF Afghanistan Child Notice Afghanistan 2018 Authors: Horia Mosadiq, Majorie Kaandorp (2018 edition) Naeem Poyesh, Hussain Hassrat, Abdul Ahad Mohammadi, Jane E. Thorson, Zakiah Mirzaei, Fatema Ahmadi (2015 edition) With support from: Majorie Kaandorp, UNICEF The Netherlands Design: Schone Vormen 2018 For further information, please contact: Majorie Kaandorp Children’s Rights Advocacy Officer UNICEF The Netherlands Email: [email protected] The Child Notice Afghanistan has been produced by UNICEF The Netherlands, in cooperation with UNICEF Afghanistan. The 2015 edition of the Child Notice Afghanistan was developed as part of the project Better information for durable solutions and protection which was financially supported by the Return Fund of the European Commission. The Child Notice describes the situation of children in the countries of origin providing legal and practical information on education, health care, child protection, armed conflict, juvenile justice, trafficking etc. The Child Notice has been developed based on this Methodology Guidance on Child Notice. 2 UNICEF Child Notice Afghanistan TABLE OF CONTENT LIST OF ACRONYMS 5 DISCLAIMER 6 INTRODUCTION 7 READER’S GUIDE 9 SUMMARY 15 1 Demographic and statistical data on children 17 1.1 Demographic and statistical data on children 17 1.2 Islam and Religion 21 1.3 Family Structure 21 1.4 Political Development 22 2 Basic Legal Information 24 2.1 Conventions on children’s and human rights 24 2.2 National legislation 25 2.3
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Lgbtgaily Tours & Excursions
    LGBT 1 OurOur Tour. YourLGBT Pride. Philosophy We have designed a new product line for a desire to be part of the colorful battle for human LGBT publicum, offering more than a simple pride with friends from all over the world, Iwe travel! If you are looking for a special itinerary have the perfect solution for you. in Italy discovering beautiful landscapes and uncountable art and cultural wonders, or if you We want to help in creating a rainbow world. and now choose your LGBT experience... Follow us on: www.GailyTour.com @GailyTour @gailytour Largo C. Battisti, 26 | 39044 - Egna (BZ) - ITALY Tel. (+39) 0471 806600 - Fax (+39) 0471 806700 VAT NUMBER IT 01652670215 Our History & Mission Established in 1997 and privately owned, Last addition to the company’s umbrella is the providing competitive travel services. Ignas Tour has been making a difference to office in Slovakia opened in 2014, consolidating Trust, reliability, financial stability, passion and our client’s group traveling experiences for two Ignas Tour's presence in the Eastern European attention to details are key aspects Ignas Tour decades. market and expanding and diversifying even is known for. In 1999 opening of a sister company in more the product line. The company prides itself on a long-term vision Hungary, adding a new destination to the Ignas Tour maintains an uncompromising and strategy and keeps in sync with the latest company’s portfolio. Since 2001 IGNAS TOUR commitment to offer the highest standards market trends in order to develop new products is also part of TUI Travel plc.
    [Show full text]
  • Enhancing Survivor-Centred Healthcare Response for Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence in Afghanistan
    Enhancing Survivor-Centred Healthcare Response for Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence in Afghanistan March 2021 | Acknowledgments All Survivors Project (ASP) and Youth Health and Development Organization (YHDO) would like to thank the victims/survivors of sexual violence, healthcare providers, community health workers and government and non-government stakeholders who participated in this research and shared their perceptions and experiences. The report was authored by Julienne Corboz. Layout and production assistance was provided by Roberto Thillet. ASP and YHDO, and the author of this report, are extremely grateful to the stakeholders who participated in the National Advisory Group, particularly those who peer reviewed and provided valuable feedback on drafts of the report, including: Taiba Jafari, Director of the Gender Directorate, Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Ministry of Public Health; Najeebullah Zadran Babrakzai, National Coordinator for the Rights of Children, Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission; and Palwasha Aabed, Child Protection Officer, United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan. The author is also grateful for peer review and feedback from the ASP and YHDO team. All Survivors Project, and not the peer reviewers, is responsible for the final content of this report. Cover illustration: Brian Stauffer © 2021 All Survivors Project and Youth and Development Organization Contents Acronyms . 4 Executive Summary . 5 Recommendations . 11 Introduction . 15 Background . 17 Overview of Methodology . 22 Results . 25 Barriers to Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence Accessing Healthcare Services 25 The Role of Communities in Supporting Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence 42 Healthcare Services for Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence . 45 Needs of Male Victims/Survivors of Sexual Violence .
    [Show full text]
  • Syddansk Universitet Folk Characterisations of Hate Speech
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by University of Southern Denmark Research Output Syddansk Universitet Folk characterisations of hate speech Millar, Sharon Louise; Nielsen, Rasmus; Lindø, Anna Vibeke; Geyer, Klaus Published in: Online Hate Speech in the European Union DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-72604-5 Publication date: 2017 Document version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Document license CC BY Citation for pulished version (APA): Millar, S. L., Nielsen, R., Lindø, A. V., & Geyer, K. (2017). Folk characterisations of hate speech. In S. Assimakopoulos, F. H. Baider, & S. Millar (Eds.), Online Hate Speech in the European Union: A Discourse- Analytic Perspective (pp. 62-65). Springer. SpringerBriefs in Linguistics, DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-72604-5 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. • Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. • You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain • You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal ? Take down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 09.
    [Show full text]
  • Legitimate Concern: the Assault on the Concept of Rape
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Via Sapientiae: The Institutional Repository at DePaul University DePaul University Via Sapientiae College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences 9-2013 Legitimate concern: the assault on the concept of rape Matthew David Burgess DePaul University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd Recommended Citation Burgess, Matthew David, "Legitimate concern: the assault on the concept of rape" (2013). College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations. 153. https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd/153 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Legitimate Concern: The Assault on the Concept of Rape A Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts By Matthew David Burgess June 2013 Women’s and Gender Studies College of Liberal Arts and Sciences DePaul University Chicago, Illinois 1 Table of Contents Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………….3 A Brief Legal History of Rape………………………………………………………………….....6 -Rape Law in the United States Prior to 1800…………………………………………….7 -The WCTU and
    [Show full text]
  • Relativitas Budaya Dan Berlangsungnya Budaya Bacha Bazi Di Afganistan Pasca Pemerintahan Taliban
    Journal of International Relations, Volume 6, Nomor 4, 2020, hal 535-544 Online di http://ejournal-s1.undip.ac.id/index.php/jihi Relativitas Budaya dan Berlangsungnya Budaya Bacha Bazi di Afganistan Pasca Pemerintahan Taliban Dwi Ramadhani Departemen Hubungan Internasional, Fakultas Ilmu Sosial dan Ilmu Politik Universitas Diponegoro Jalan Prof.H.Soedarto,SH., Tembalang, Semarang, Kotak Pos 1269 Website: http://www.fisip.undip.ac.id Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT This research explains the issue of opposing human rights carried out by the people of Afghanistan against boys through the bacha bazi culture. The conservative culture in Afghanistan led to a separation between men and women, thus bacha bazi serves to be a means of fulfilling the sexual needs of the male community in Afghanistan. “Women are for children, boys are for pleasure” is a famous sentence that explains the culture of bacha bazi for the people of Afghanistan. Although very normal, bacha bazi is taboo to talk about so that the practice is done in secret. The Taliban regime in 1996-2001 was able to abolish the bacha bazi culture, but with the fall of the regime, this culture is increasingly spreading. Domestic and international organizations, as well as foreign troops in Afghanistan, have sought to eradicate the culture, but have encountered difficulties. So this research was conducted to answer how the bacha bazi culture can take place after the Taliban government. The research methodology is an explanative qualitative method through data collection techniques with a literature study. The results of this study are proof that cultural relativity keeps this culture going on in Afghanistan despite violating human rights.
    [Show full text]
  • Same-Sex Marriage: When Will It Reach Utah? Robert Wintemute
    Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law Volume 20 | Issue 2 Article 12 3-1-2006 Same-Sex Marriage: When Will It Reach Utah? Robert Wintemute Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/jpl Part of the Family Law Commons, and the Sexuality and the Law Commons Recommended Citation Robert Wintemute, Same-Sex Marriage: When Will It Reach Utah?, 20 BYU J. Pub. L. 527 (2006). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.byu.edu/jpl/vol20/iss2/12 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by BYU Law Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Brigham Young University Journal of Public Law by an authorized editor of BYU Law Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Same-Sex Marriage: When Will It Reach Utah? Robert Wintemute∗ Attempts to amend constitutions so as to make legal1 marriage impossible for same-sex couples are futile. Amendments of this kind are nothing more than temporary “legal dikes” designed to create “legal islands” in which a heterosexual majority can continue to discriminate against a lesbian and gay minority in relation to access to legal marriage. These amendments seek to strip the gay and lesbian minority of any possibility of seeking protection against such discrimination from either the legislature or the courts. Where such amendments have been adopted, they will eventually be repealed or invalidated, because the “incoming tide,” i.e., the long-term international trend, will eventually bring full legal equality to our fellow human beings who happen to be lesbian and gay individuals, or members of same-sex couples, with or without children.
    [Show full text]
  • The Legal Recognition of Same-Sex Couples in Europe and the Role of the European Court of Human Rights
    83 The Legal Recognition of Same-Sex Couples in Europe and the Role of the European Court of Human Rights Jens M. Scherpe1 I. Introduction – It’s Been a Long Road... The legal regulation of family relationships same-sex couples in an increasing number has long been formulated around a “tradi- of jurisdictions, and in others, a form of reg- tional” notion of the family as a unit com- istered partnership is available or de facto prising a heterosexual married couple who relationships of same-sex couples are rec- conceive children within wedlock. This has ognised. But even in Europe, particularly in resulted in the protection mechanisms of the Eastern and South-Eastern Europe, there law focusing on such family units, with other are still many jurisdictions where there is no family forms such as, for example, same-sex legal recognition of same-sex relationships. couples, unmarried couples, couples who are However, in Schalk and Kopf v Austria2 the unable to conceive naturally and single par- European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) ents failing to have their family relationships recognised that same-sex couples enjoy the adequately recognised and protected in law. right to “respect for family life” protected This often included, at least initially, not rec- by Article 8 of the ECHR, and this article ar- ognising “non-traditional” families’ rights to gues that this mandates some form of legal respect for their family life under Article 8 of recognition of same-sex relationships by all the Convention for the Protection of Human contracting states of the ECHR and paves Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR).
    [Show full text]
  • Phd Thesis Entitled “A White Wedding? the Racial Politics of Same-Sex Marriage in Canada”, Under the Supervision of Dr
    A White Wedding? The Racial Politics of Same-Sex Marriage in Canada by Suzanne Judith Lenon A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Sociology and Equity Studies in Education Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto © Copyright by Suzanne Judith Lenon (2008) A White Wedding? The Racial Politics of Same-Sex Marriage in Canada Doctor of Philosophy, 2008 Suzanne Judith Lenon Department of Sociology and Equity Studies in Education University of Toronto Abstract In A White Wedding? The Racial Politics of Same-Sex Marriage, I examine the inter-locking relations of power that constitute the lesbian/gay subject recognized by the Canadian nation-state as deserving of access to civil marriage. Through analysis of legal documents, Parliamentary and Senate debates, and interviews with lawyers, I argue that this lesbian/gay subject achieves intelligibility in the law by trading in on and shoring up the terms of racialized neo-liberal citizenship. I also argue that the victory of same-sex marriage is implicated in reproducing and securing a racialized Canadian national identity as well as a racialized civilizational logic, where “gay rights” are the newest manifestation of the modernity of the “West” in a post-9/11 historical context. By centring a critical race/queer conceptual framework, this research project follows the discursive practices of respectability, freedom and civility that circulate both widely and deeply in this legal struggle. I contend that in order to successfully shed its historical markers of degeneracy, the lesbian/gay subject must be constituted not as a sexed citizen but rather as a neoliberal citizen, one who is intimately tied to notions of privacy, property, autonomy and freedom of choice, and hence one who is racialized as white.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Feel Like a Woman, Or Why Punishment Is a Drag Mary Anne Franks University of Miami School of Law, [email protected]
    University of Miami Law School University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository Articles Faculty and Deans 2014 How to Feel Like a Woman, or Why Punishment Is a Drag Mary Anne Franks University of Miami School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.miami.edu/fac_articles Part of the Law and Gender Commons, Law and Society Commons, and the Sexuality and the Law Commons Recommended Citation Mary Anne Franks, How to Feel Like a Woman, or Why Punishment Is a Drag, 61 UCLA L. Rev. 566 (2014). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty and Deans at University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by an authorized administrator of University of Miami School of Law Institutional Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. How to Feel Like a Woman, or Why Punishment Is a Drag Mary Anne Franks ABSTRACT If a man in prison says that he was made -to feel like a woman," this is commonly understood to mean that he was degraded, dehumanized, and sexualized. This association of femininity with punishment has significant implications for the way our society understands not only the sexual abuse of men in prison but also sexual abuse generally These important implications are usually overlooked, however, because law and society typically regard prison feminization as a problem of gender transposition: that is, as a problem of men being treated like women. In contrast, this Article argues that feminization is punitive for both men and women.
    [Show full text]
  • Rape Reform in Late Nineteenth-Century America Jane E
    Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities Volume 9 | Issue 1 Article 1 January 1997 "Even a Worm Will Turn at Last": Rape Reform in Late Nineteenth-Century America Jane E. Larson Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/yjlh Part of the History Commons, and the Law Commons Recommended Citation Jane E. Larson, "Even a Worm Will Turn at Last": Rape Reform in Late Nineteenth-Century America, 9 Yale J.L. & Human. (1997). Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/yjlh/vol9/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities by an authorized editor of Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Larson: "Even a Worm Will Turn at Last" Articles "Even a Worm Will Turn at Last": Rape Reform in Late Nineteenth-Century America Jane E. Larson* Even a worm will turn at last, and when her degradation was thus deliberately planned and sanctioned by the state .... then * Associate Professor, University of Wisconsin Law School. I received invaluable access and assistance from the Frances Willard Archive, Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Evanston, Ill., the National Archives, Washington, D.C., and the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. I am also deeply grateful to Kathryn Abrams, Leigh Bienen, Cynthia Grant Bowman, Pamela Bridgewater, Ben Brown, Penelope Bryan, Lisa Brush, Peter Carstensen, Alta Charo, Richard Chused, Elizabeth Clark, Anne Coughlin, Mary Louise Fellows, Sarah Gordon, Michael Grossberg, Hendrik Hartog, Linda Redlick Hirshman, Linda McClain, Gwen McNamee, Tracey Meares, Elizabeth Mertz, Michelle Oberman, Richard Posner, Dorothy Roberts, Jonathan Rosenblum, Jane Schacter, Stephen Schulhofer, Clyde Spillenger, Morrison Torrey, Rosalie Wahl, William Whitford, and the Chicago Feminist Law Professors & Friends for comments on this Article.
    [Show full text]