Today the marriage rate is at its lowest point ever, the divorce
rate is near its highest, and more children are living without their
fathers than at any time in American history. Yet the prestigious
American Law Institute, which exercises great influence on American
jurisprudence, has just released a series of family law
recommendations that would exacerbate these problems by trivializing
the importance of marriage, encouraging divorce and accelerating
fatherlessness.
The marriage rate has dipped 40% over the last four decades and
over a million couples divorce each year. A record 1.3 million
babies were born out of wedlock in 1999, marking the first time in
American history that a full third of all US births were to unwed
mothers. Sociologists, economists, and child-welfare advocates agree
that too many children are living without a father in the home, and
the public echoes these sentiments. According to a 1996 Gallup poll,
79 percent of Americans believe that "the most significant family or
social problem facing Americans the physical absence of the father
from the home."
Where have all the fathers gone? Maybe we should ask the family
court system. Millions of decent fathers who have faithfully loved
and supported their children have been downgraded to noncustodial
parent status by courts that have stripped them of their natural
right to the custody, care, and nurture of their own children. These
fathers and the children who love them are victims of the greatest
and least recognized problem in American family life today--the
epidemic of access and visitation denial which family courts often
permit.
Rather than addressing these issues, the ALI's just released
report, The Principles of the Law of Family Dissolution , instead
proposes weakening marriage and families by giving incentives to
spouses to leave their marriages and replace their children's
biological parents. Courts would reward this behavior by granting
"de facto parent" status to the cohabiting partner of a legal parent
who has lived with that legal parent's children for two years and
has performed caretaking functions. Thus noncustodial
parents--usually fathers--could be forced to share legal custody of
their own children with their ex-spouses' new boyfriends or
girlfriends.
Under this proposal a parent could cohabitate with several
partners over a period of years and each of these partners could be
granted shared custody and visitation rights. At every step the
noncustodial biological parent's relationship with his or her
children would be diluted in favor of a "de facto parent" who never
made the marital commitment the biological parent did. Beyond the
damage to children caused by this merry-go-round, one cringes at the
emotional toll on parents and children (not to mention the legal
costs) involved when custody is contested not simply between
biological parents but also between biological parents and "de
facto" parents.
The ALI notes that it is "increasingly implausible to attribute
special significance" to a couple's decision to marry and equates
"domestic partners" ("two persons of the same or opposite sex, not
married to one another, who for a significant period of time share a
primary residence and a life together as a couple") with married
couples in many aspects of family law. This trivializes the serious,
lifelong commitment which marriage demands and the stability for
children which it provides.
Research establishes that children fare best in a married, two
parent home, and that the largest single predictor of whether a
student will graduate high school, attend college, become involved
in crime or drugs, or get pregnant is a fathers' presence in that
home. Family researcher Judith Wallerstein, co-author of The
Unexpected Legacy of Divorce: a 25 Year Landmark Study , found that
the effects of family breakdown stay with children long after their
childhoods, as they are less likely to marry, have successful
marriages, and have children than adults who grew up in intact
families.
Family courts have hurt children and families by failing to
recognize the importance of ensuring that both biological parents
can remain integral parts of their children's lives following a
divorce. The solution is to replace the sole physical custody norm
with shared parenting--the presumption of joint legal and physical
custody. Judges could deviate from this egalitarian arrangement only
if there is clear and convincing evidence that one of the parents
has committed acts that render that parent unfit, such as child
abuse or neglect. If divorcing parents are unable to agree on a
shared parenting plan, the courts would develop a plan that would
afford both parents equitable custody and parenting time.
Shared parenting may also help keep families together. In a study
examining people's motives for filing for divorce, economists
Margaret Brinig and Douglas Allen analyzed 46,000 divorcing couples
and found that most divorce petitions are filed by women, and that
they do so in part because they know they can expect to obtain sole
custody of their children. This expectation sometimes leads them to
conclude that giving up on a struggling marriage is more appealing
than attempting to save it. Brinig and Allen's research indicates
that a shared custody norm may be the best way to reduce divorce
rates.
There is also evidence that many struggling couples can
resuscitate their marriages and find happiness if they are committed
to doing so. In The Case for Marriage , Maggie Gallagher explains
that in a broad survey of what married couples described as "very
unhappy marriages," five years later, six out of seven couples who
stayed together described their marriages as "happier," with a
majority claiming that they were currently "very happy."
The ALI claims that its proposals are "innovative" and
"responsive to the enormous changes in society that have taken place
over the last century." Yet their proposals ignore fundamental
principles that will never change: children need, want and deserve
the emotional, physical and financial support of both biological
parents; the best place for children is in an intact, married
family; and men and women are happiest when they are in a loving,
committed marriage.
This column first appeared in Human Events
(1/27/03).
Dianna Thompson is a founder and executive director of the
American Coalition for Fathers and Children (www.acfc.org).
She can be contacted by e-mail at
DThompson2232@aol.com.
Glenn Sacks writes about men's and fathers' issues. He can be
reached at
Glenn@GlennSacks.com.