Masters of Their Own Destiny: Children's Identities, Parents' Assimilation Demands and State Intervention

Date

2012

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Virginia School of Law

Abstract

Parents’ assimilation demands compromise children’s healthy identity development and attachments with parents. For LGBT youth in particular, rejection from families heightens their vulnerability to negative health, legal and economic outcomes, yet leaves them under-protected by the legal system. So far, children who have experienced family mistreatment in the form of heteronormative assimilation demands on their sexual orientation or gender identity have been unable to mobilize courts to understand why assimilation demands are harmful and how to protect children from such mistreatment. Thus assimilation demands that undermine children’s identities and are harmful to their wellbeing should be recognized as an additional exception to parental rights. Rather than suggesting assimilation demands are a form of emotional abuse, this Article recommends a new framework – family in need of services – that could empower children to seek state intervention that would help families support LGBT youth and facilitate family cohesion.

Description

Keywords

parental rights, LGBT youth, assimilation, sexual orientation, gender identity, attachment, child abuse, neglect, child services, mediation

Citation

Rachmilovitz, O. R. (2012). Masters of Their Own Destiny: Children's Identities, Parents' Assimilation Demands and State Intervention (Doctoral dissertation, University of Virginia School of Law).

DOI