The claim that same-sex parents produce less positive child outcomes than opposite-sex parents—either because such families lack both a male and female parent or because both parents are not the biological parents of their children—contradicts abundant social science research. Decades of methodologically sound social science research, especially multiple nationally representative studies and the expert evidence introduced in the district courts below, confirm that positive child wellbeing is the product of stability in the relationship between the two parents, stability in the relationship between the parents and child, and greater parental socioeconomic resources. Whether a child is raised by same-sex or opposite-sex parents has no bearing on a child’s wellbeing. The clear and consistent consensus in the social science profession is that across a wide range of indicators, children fare just as well when they are raised by same-sex parents when compared to children raised by opposite-sex parents.
Pretty clear, huh? No disagreement. No division or dispute. The research shows that children do just as well when raised by same-sex parents as they do when raised by two parents of the opposite sex.
How did Scalia miss that? Good question. Especially because it turns out that this paragraph summarizing the state of social scientific research and knowledge on the topic wasn’t published in an academic journal or buried in press release or anything like that. It’s from the amicus curiae brief that the ASA filed in the very case Scalia was commenting on. In other words, as Ezra Klein put on March 29:
[T]he official organization representing American sociologists went out of their way to provide the Supreme Court with their “consensus” opinion on the effect of same-sex parents on children. And yet, when struggling for a “concrete” harm that could come from gay marriage, Scalia went with “considerable disagreement among sociologists.”
So this is the second disturbing dimension of Scalia’s comment. Klein explains further what is so troubling:
So we’ve gone from a weak claim— “considerable disagreement” over harm is not the same thing as actual harm—to an explicitly wrong claim. Scalia offered no details or evidence of this considerable disagreement among sociologists, and it’s hard to believe he’s a better judge of the profession than the ASA, whose brief he notably declined to mention.
That’s all unfortunate enough. But what really has me thinking and brought me down into the depths is the larger, cynical message about social science that is being sent. For Scalia and his ilk, there is no real knowledge in the social sciences, no authority. Not even any real data or useful information. Just a lot of disagreement and differences of opinion. This disturbing message and implication compounds the frustrations and concerns about (lack of) public understanding of the significance, importance, and value of the social sciences I expressed last week in my little commentary on the Congressional attacks on NSF funding for political science. More to say here, obviously, much more, though I’m not sure I’ve got stomach for it right now.
(If you skipped the link above, here it is again: The ASA’s amicus curiae brief.)
Comments 6
Philip N. Cohen — March 30, 2013
Scalia didn't miss it. He got the "no clear answer" line from the brief by Regnerus et al, also submitted on the case, described here: http://familyinequality.wordpress.com/2013/03/01/marriage-denial/. That is a sociologist denying the consensus. So there is no consensus. Just like with evolution and climate change. I assume we'll see this spelled out with citations in Scalia's eventual decision on the case.
Turkish Alabaster — March 31, 2013
Agreement within the ASA could be construed as a "clear consensus" because it is an "Association" of many sociologist and their work (and their universitys' and students' work).. It is in no way a "unanimous consensus." There can and will never be "unanimous consensus," especially when you juxtapose it with a study funded to the tune of 800,000 dollars by two social conservative groups who have an outcome in mind.
Regnerus's NFSS compared children adopted by same-sex couples with children who were adopted by heterosexual couples and children who remained with their married bio-mothers and fathers. The study, by design, found that children adopted by same-sex couples did not fare as well socioeconomically as children who remained with their biological parents. However, the study also found that children adopted by same-sex couples fared just as well as those adopted by heterosexual couples.
So the study Scalia quotes is incredibly misleading when phrased the right way. If you would like to study this further, take a look at http://www.prc.utexas.edu/nfss/index.html - the actual study's page (which doesn't make the results accessible, but will familiarize you with the study's design) and if you websearch for Regnerus NFSS you will find a number of criticisms of it that are not on free WordPress-hosted blogs.
Moving on Marriage » Citings and Sightings — April 1, 2013
[...] scientific consensus around the quality of parenting across different family forms. Interestingly, Justice Scalia then went on the record stating that there is no such consensus; he appears to have taken his cue from another amicus brief coauthored by Mark Regenerus, who has [...]
Friday Roundup: April 12, 2013 » The Editors' Desk — April 12, 2013
[...] “Scalia Takes it from ‘Bad’ to ‘Really Bad’,” by Doug Hartmann. In which an amicus brief by the ASA is pushed aside in favor of one by Mark Regenerus. [...]
Protecting Science From Harm, Protecting Against Harmful Science | my sociology — May 2, 2013
[...] submitted their own amicus brief to the Court. And, somehow, this one study counters all of the other studies enough that Supreme Court Justice Scalia [...]
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[…] submitted their own amicus brief to the Court. And, somehow, this one study counters all of the other studies enough that Supreme Court Justice Scalia […]