Yale Law School
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  • PublicationOpen Access
    Why Domestic Violence Offenders Don't Give Up Their Guns
    (Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, 2025) Nanasi, Natalie
    Perpetrators of intimate partner violence are barred by federal law and many states’ laws from possessing firearms. While such prohibitions enjoy popular support, they are sporadically and inconsistently enforced, placing the lives of survivors at risk when offenders do not voluntarily comply. Many experts, including this author, have offered legal and policy solutions to increase the likelihood that perpetrators of domestic violence will either willingly relinquish their guns or otherwise be dispossessed of them. But these proposals may have been premature. This Article is the first to take a step back and inquire why offenders do not surrender their firearms as ordered and what might incentivize them to do so. Understanding the worldviews and lived experiences of those subject to domestic violence gun prohibitions is a critical, and to-date ignored, first step to formulating viable solutions. The Article is based on original empirical research conducted with perpetrators of intimate partner violence enrolled in a Batterer Intervention Program in Texas. The research reveals a range of novel findings based on both survey responses and in-depth interviews. The data show that most men subject to domestic violence firearm regulations are aware that they are prohibited possessors. They are reluctant to comply with the law, however, due to the atypically high levels of violence—including gun violence—they have experienced in their lifetimes, which has led them to conclude that firearms are necessary to protect themselves and their loved ones from harm. Respondents also identify closely with a stereotypically masculine identity that leads them to associate gun ownership with power and control; have strong (but not necessarily accurate) opinions about the Second Amendment; and are enmeshed in cultures where gun-carrying is the norm. These insights about the men who are impacted by domestic violence gun regulations can help us promulgate laws and policies that offenders will be more inclined to comply with and are more likely to be enforced and enforceable. And importantly, successfully removing firearms from the hands of abusers can bring us one step closer to ending the epidemic of intimate partner violence gun fatalities in the United States.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Scrutinizing Transgender Healthcare Bans Through Intersex Exceptions
    (Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, 2025) Lau, Holning; Fedders, Barbara
    Major professional medical organizations—for example, the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association, and Endocrine Society—consider gender-affirming care to be safe and, at times, essential for vulnerable transgender youth. Despite these benefits, 26 states have banned gender-affirming care for minors. Proponents of these bans raise concerns about potential medical harms, the irreversibility of treatments, and the adequacy of informed consent. Every state ban includes an exception for so-called gender-normalizing surgeries, which are performed on intersex infants to conform their bodies to socially constructed expectations about the male/female binary. The procedures are rarely medically necessary, but proponents of the surgeries contend that they alleviate stigma. Far too often, these procedures result in ongoing pain, loss of sexual sensation, psychological harm, physical scarring, or even sterilization. The irreversibility of these surgeries and the inability of infants to consent are abundantly clear, and research suggests widespread failures to obtain informed consent from parents. At first blush, the intersex exception in transgender healthcare bans appears to create a stark inconsistency. The very concerns cited to justify the bans—medical harm, irreversibility, and lack of informed consent—are even more pronounced in the context of intersex surgeries. This inconsistency raises the question: Why do the very laws that purport to protect against these factors include exceptions for intersex surgeries? This Article argues that the intersex exceptions are, in fact, consistent with sentiments behind bans on gender-affirming care: a deep-seated fear of and discomfort with children who do not conform to traditional sex stereotypes. By examining the intersex exceptions, the Article reveals that sex stereotypes, irrational fear, and disgust are foundational motivations underpinning the laws. The Article further contends that these motivations call into question the bans’ constitutionality. As parents of transgender youth challenge these bans in court, with one case—United States v. Skrmetti—pending before the Supreme Court, this Article offers a crucial perspective for evaluating the forthcoming Supreme Court ruling and for analyzing subsequent legal developments surrounding gender-affirming care for minors.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    "She Had Slain Her Favorite": Race, Gender, Violence, and the Rule of Law in the Military-Occupied South
    (Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, 2025) Aiken, Joshua
    This Article excavates the 1865 trial United States v. Temperance Neely to analyze how emergent legal cultures in the military-occupied South calcified racial slavery’s logic despite formal emancipation. Through examination of previously unanalyzed court proceedings, I demonstrate how this case illuminates three interlocking dimensions of postbellum jurisprudence: legal systems simultaneously acknowledged Black life while preserving white authority through plantation logics that naturalized Black women’s subordination; violence against Black women and extraction of their labor became integral to reproducing social conditions necessary for racial-economic order; and Black witnesses’ testimonies, though formally admitted, revealed systemic patterns that rendered Black women’s experiences unintelligible within emergent legal frameworks. Drawing on the theoretical insights of Anthony Paul Farley, Saidiya Hartman, and Hortense Spillers, I observe the persistence of “white-over-black” ideology through an “American grammar” of formal equality, liberal rights, and the “law’s calculation of personhood.” Situating the Neely case in scholarship on the Reconstruction Era, Marxist feminism, Black women’s history, I consider how formal legal reasoning relied on notions of gendered sentiment, character, and subjectivity to privilege white sentiment and justify racial unfreedom. Attending the immediate post-surrender South, my reading emphasizes how legal actors allowed Black women’s bodies to be contested sites of meaning, through which categories of race, gender, and labor might be explored. Challenging conventional understandings of the rule of law, I reconceptualize the rule of law as deference to legal institutions that transmute historical subjugation into contemporary unfreedom sanctioned by the state. By reading “along the bias grain” of the legal archive, this investigation reveals how postbellum legal frameworks positioned Black women as objects rather than subjects. This case illuminates the constitutive role Black women’s labor played in reconstructing American society and the continuities between nineteenth-century rationalization of violence and ability of contemporary legal systems to respond to Black people’s injuries and claims.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    An Indecent Exposure of the Rules of Legal Ethics
    (Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, 2025) Bartlett, Lauren E.
    Thousands of attorneys experience rape and sexual assault by clients, as well as indecent exposure, public masturbation, unwanted touching, verbal threats, and stalking. These incidents are not often publicly reported, but client sexual violence against attorneys is not uncommon. The ethical rules currently fail to account for an attorney who has experienced client sexual violence, whether to allow for termination of representation or to mitigate future harm to other lawyers. While the ethical rules are usually thought of as neutral, this Article critically examines the gender stereotypes and structures of oppression corseting the rules. Relying on a fifty-state survey of U.S. ethical rules and personal experiences with sexual violence while practicing law as a cisgender white woman and abolitionist, the author explores what type of ethical guidance would be appropriate for attorneys who have experienced client sexual violence.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    A New Satanic Panic
    (Yale Journal of Law and Feminism, 2025) Booth, Jonathan J.
    A broad backlash to LGBTQ visibility and equality has emerged in recent years. Its conservative proponents have asserted that queer people are Satanic, called gender affirming healthcare child abuse, and labeled adults who teach about gender and sexuality “groomers.” This rhetorical shift, combined with an explosion of anti-transgender legislation, may presage a revival of the 1980s Satanic Panic, when fears of brutal crimes allegedly committed by Satanic cults swept the nation. These accusations spurred the longest trial in American history, commanded tabloid news, and led dozens of people to be convicted of lurid crimes, nearly all of whom were later exonerated. Today we are at risk of a similar panic reoccurring, in which baseless criminal prosecutions may be brought against LGBTQ people and their allies, especially in conservative Christian areas. This Article provides the first historical account of the original Satanic Panic in the legal literature, narrating two major criminal cases and examining the underlying causes of the Panic, including backlash to the feminist and gay liberation movements. It then analyzes the widespread discourse on the political right that connects “gender ideology” to Satanism and child abuse, and the broad adoption of legislation restricting and criminalizing access to gender affirming healthcare. Finally, it evaluates the likelihood of a reoccurrence of the Satanic Panic, weighing the growing animus against LGBTQ people against more encouraging changes, such as improved interrogation practices. It concludes that there is a significant risk that the current moral panic around transgender people could result in a new Satanic Panic. Finally, it proposes actions that lawyers and advocates could take to reduce the likelihood of unjust prosecutions.