With the year almost at an end, we take a look back at the top ten most read fifteeneightyfour articles of 2013.
Read MoreOn March 26th, the Supreme Court of the United States will hear the arguments in Hollingsworth v. Perry, a case that will determine whether California’s voter initiative to ban gay marriage in the state is constitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment. Here at Cambridge University Press, we rounded up six of our experts on the issue for a virtual roundtable discussion about the case and its impact.
Read MoreIf, by our example of how we have reclaimed our own very UN-Hetero values of self-love, self-esteem, and self-affirmation, we can inspire the Spiritually STILL-indentured Colonialized Minority Communities to invent similar ways to rise from their . . . servitude to stand once more . . . —no longer in the values and symbols of […]
Read MoreThe question of whether Gays should be allowed to serve in the armed services—that is, the generally accepted question of whether Gays should be permitted to serve—is actually divisible into two questions.
Read MoreShannon Gilreath is the professor for the interdisciplinary study of law and of women’s and gender studies at Wake Forest University and the author of The End of Straight Supremacy: Realizing Gay Liberation (forthcoming November 2011). In this article, he responds to the recent passage of marriage equality in New York.
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