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92 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 105 (2017)
Romantic Discrimination and Children

handle is hein.journals/chknt92 and id is 119 raw text is: 








ROMANTIC DISCRIMINATION AND CHILDREN


                           SOLANGEL MALDONADO*

      In recent years, social scientists have used online dating sites to study
 the role of race in the dating and marriage market. Their research has re-
 vealed a racialized and gendered hierarchy that disproportionately excludes
 African-American  men  and women   and Asian-American   men.  For decades,
 other researchers have  studied the risks and outcomes   for children who
 grow up  in single-parent homes as compared  to children raised by married
 parents. This Essay explores how   racial preferences in the dating market
 potentially affect the children of middle-class African-American  mothers
 who lack or reject opportunities to marry.' What is the relationship between
 racial preferences in the dating and marriage market and children's access
 to resources and  opportunities? Do  racial preferences in the dating  and
 marriage market  increase the likelihood that children of middle-class Afri-
 can-American  mothers  will be raised in homes  with  fewer resources  and
 limited access to opportunities available to other children with similarly
 educated parents? If so, what, if anything, should the law do to minimize
 racial preferences' effects on children?

       I. RACIAL PREFERENCES IN THE DATING AND MARRIAGE MARKET

     Americans'   acceptance of interracial intimacy has increased dramati-
cally in just one generation. In 1987, less than 50% of Americans approved
of African-Americans   and Whites  dating. By 2013, 87%   of all Americans,
and  96%  of 18-29  year olds, approved  of marriages (not just dating) be-
tween  African-Americans   and Whites.2 Yet, despite our approval  of inter-


* Joseph M. Lynch Professor of Law, Seton Hall University School of Law.
    1. Legal scholars have examined how racial preferences in the foster care and adoption system
harm children. See e.g., Solangel Maldonado, Discouraging Racial Preferences in Adoptions, 39 U.C.
DAVIS L. REV. 1415 (2006); Richard Banks, The Color of Desire: Fulfilling Adoptive Parents' Racial
Preferences Through Discriminatory State Action, 107 YALE L.J. 875 (1998); ELIZABETH BARTHOLET,
FAMILY BONDS: ADOPTION, INFERTILITY, AND THE NEW WORLD OF CHILD PRODUCTION (Beacon
Press, 1999).
    2. Jeffrey Passel et al., Marrying Out: One-in-Seven New Marriages is Interracial or Inter-
ethnic, PEW RES. CTR. (June 4, 2010), http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/files/2010/10/755-marrying-
out.pdf; Frank Newport, In U.S., 87% Approve of Black- White Marriage, vs. 4% in 1958, GALLUP (July
25, 2013).


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