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Same-Sex Marriages - Legal Issues (Paperback)
Loot Price: R244
Discovery Miles 2 440
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Same-Sex Marriages - Legal Issues (Paperback)
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Loot Price R244
Discovery Miles 2 440
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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The recognition of same-sex marriages generates debate on both the
federal and state levels. Either legislatively or judicially,
same-sex marriage is legal in seven states. Other states allow
civil unions or domestic partnerships, which grant all or part of
state-level rights, benefits, and/or responsibilities of marriage.
Some states have statutes or constitutional amendments limiting
marriage to one man and one woman. These variations raise questions
about the validity of such unions outside the contracted
jurisdiction and have bearing on the distribution of federal
benefits. This report discusses DOMA and legal challenges to it. It
reviews legal principles applied to determine the validity of a
marriage contracted in another state and surveys the various
approaches employed by states to enable or to prevent same-sex
marriage. The report also examines House and Senate resolutions
introduced in previous Congresses proposing a constitutional
amendment and limiting federal courts' jurisdiction to hear or
determine any question pertaining to the interpretation of DOMA.
Massachusetts became the first state to legalize same-sex marriages
on May 17, 2004, as a result of a November 2003 decision by the
state's highest court that denying gay and lesbian couples the
right to marry violated the state's constitution.1 Similarly, state
supreme courts in New Jersey,2 California,3 Connecticut,4 and Iowa5
found that denying same-sex couples the right to marry violated
their state constitutions. In addition, the California,
Connecticut, and Iowa courts found that parallel statutory
structures, including domestic partnerships and/or civil unions,
were not the constitutional equivalent of civil marriage. However,
in New Jersey, the court left open the option for the state
legislature to provide a parallel statutory structure which would
allow same-sex couples to enjoy the same rights, privileges, and
burdens as married opposite-sex couples.6 While the aforementioned
states legalized same-sex marriages judicially, on April 7, 2009,
Vermont became the first state to legalize same-sex marriages
legislatively. State legislators garnered a sufficient number of
votes to override the governor's veto. Similarly, governors in
Maine,7 New Hampshire, New York,8 and Washington9 signed bills
legalizing same-sex marriages.
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