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Marital Privilege: Marriage, Inequality, and the Transformation of American Law (Yale Law Library Series in Legal History and Reference)

By Serena Mayeri

Laws and statutes, Politics and government

Synthetic audio, Automated braille

Summary

How the privileged legal status of marriage survived decades of constitutional struggle and social change   The United States is unusual among wealthy western nations in the degree to which the law channels public benefits and private economic resources through… marriage. This remains so despite seismic changes in American family life in the last several decades of the twentieth century. During this period, marriage rates declined while divorce and nonmarital childbearing soared. Social movements—for racial and economic justice, women&’s and gay rights and liberation, civil liberties, and reproductive freedom—transformed the legal landscape.   In Marital Privilege, Serena Mayeri tells the stories of parents and partners, activists and lawyers who challenged the legal primacy of marriage. They made innovative constitutional claims in courts and launched grassroots efforts to change laws and practices that penalized nonmarital relationships. But even though reforms eliminated the most visible discrimination against women, people of color, and children born to unmarried parents—and, eventually, against gay and lesbian Americans—marriage&’s privileged status endured. Because marriage increasingly correlated with education and wealth, marital primacy intensified racial and economic inequality. Marital Privilege explains how, as American law selectively incorporated principles of liberty and equality, the benefits of marriage became increasingly unavailable to those who needed them most.

Title Details

ISBN 9780300283624
Publisher Yale University Press
Copyright Date 2025
Book number 6660133
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Marital Privilege: Marriage, Inequality, and the Transformation of American Law (Yale Law Library Series in Legal History and Reference)

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