Nonfiction Reviews
Publishers Weekly
June 15, 2009
When Gay People Get Married: What Happens When
Societies Legalize M.V. Lee Badgett. New York Univ.,
$35 (320p) ISBN 978-0-8147-9114-1
While the summer of 2008 may have been “the
summer of love” for American same-sex couples, as
thousands flocked to California for marriage
licenses, the summer of 2009 may go down in history
as a time of profound contention and confusion over
Proposition 8, which revoked those couples' right to
marry. Still, as Badgett, the research director of
the Williams Institute for Sexual Orientation Law
and Public Policy at UCLA, argues, the
transformation of the policy landscape for gays and
lesbians was nothing short of remarkable,
considering the very real possibility of a
constitutional amendment to ban it just a few years
earlier. Despite her optimism about gay unions,
however, Badgett sets out to examine their potential
impact in the U.S., using European Union countries,
specifically the Netherlands—where same-sex couples
have had the right to marry since 2001—as her
rainbow-hued road map. Badgett's cogent and
comprehensive study of the societal implications of
same-sex marriage is learned and persuasive; gays
and lesbians who once again pick up their protest
signs and banners might do well to bring along
Badgett's book as well. (Aug.)