Sessions Information

  • January 8, 2010
    10:30 am - 12:15 pm
    Session Type: Section Call for Papers
    Session Capacity: N/A
    Location: N/A
    Room: Elmwood
    Floor: Third Floor

    One or more presenters were selected from a call for papers.

     

    (Program to be published in Journal of Law & Family Studies)

     

    Increasingly, there is a call for restraint in or even abandonment of law’s regulation of intimate life, allowing for relationships forged from self-determination and free choice. This ideal, attractive as it may be, often defies reality. It remains the case that individuals are not all equally free. What is the appropriate role for law regarding inequalities manifest in family life? With a focus on wealth disparities, this program will explore various interactions between money, intimacy and law and the degree to which law serves the goal of equality across gender, sexual orientation, race and class. Because the topic is potentially so broad, the panelists will highlight a few instances where these issues converge. Discussion will include the legal regulation of economic activity in committed adult intimate relationships, and in parent-child relationships.  

     

    Business Meeting at Program Conclusion.

Session Speakers
Widener University Delaware Law School
Speaker

University of North Carolina School of Law
Speaker

University of Minnesota Law School
Speaker

University of Baltimore School of Law
Speaker from a Call for Papers

Widener University Delaware Law School
Moderator

Session Fees

Fees information is not available at this time.