In re: Gill - Summary of Scientific Evidence (11/25/2008)
This document summarizes the expert testimony presented at
trial by counsel for Martin Gill and counsel for John James Doe. Gill is a gay Miami man who is seeking
to adopt John and James Doe, two young children Gill and his partner have been
fostering for four years. In order
for these adoptions to go forward, Gill and the children had to challenge the
constitutionality of Florida’s law that automatically bans adoption
by gay people. That involved
presenting expert testimony on the harm the ban causes to children such as John
and James Doe, the scientific research on the well-being of children raised by
gay and lesbian parents, as well as expert testimony refuting the asserted
rationales for the exclusion offered by the State and its expert witnesses.
Below is a summary of the expert
testimony presented by the expert witnesses for Gill and the children.
Expert testimony
about the harm the gay exclusion visits upon the children in this case: Dr.
David Brodzinsky
Dr. David Brodzinsky, a clinical and developmental
psychologist, evaluated the family over a two day period. The undisputed
testimony of Dr. Brodzinsky was that John Doe and James Doe are very strongly
and securely attached to Martin and Tom Roe, Sr. as parents, and Tom Roe, Jr. as
a sibling.
Dr. Brodzinsky further testified that being removed from this
family would be “emotionally devastating” for John Doe and James Doe and would
cause them long-term damage.
Dr. Brodzinsky explained:
For James Doe, it’s the only home
he’s ever known. Not only are these
his parents in every sense of the word
. . ., he’s very emotionally
bonded, connected, attached to them.
Disrupted attachments raise the risk, significantly, for all sorts of
long-term problems.
For John Doe, he’s a child who
came into the family with a risk history already, previous disrupt[ed]
placements. To remove him at this
time, when he has stability in his life, residential stability and emotional
stability, would be devastating to him.
In my opinion, it would cause long-term damage.
Dr. Brodzinsky testified that the long-term damage that could
result were John Doe to be separated from Martin and Tom Roe, Sr. includes
academic problems, depression, anxiety, trust issues, and difficulty forming
bonds.
Dr. Brodzinsky concluded that it is in the best interest of
the children to be adopted by Martin and to remain in this family.
Testimony about the
scientific research on the well-being of children raised by gay parents: Dr.
Michael Lamb
The expert testimony showed that over 40 years of scientific
research in the field of child development has established that the predictors
of children’s healthy adjustment are: i) the quality of the child’s relationship
with the parent(s) —a relationship characterized by warmth, closeness, and
parental sensitivity and commitment promotes healthy adjustment; ii) the quality
of the relationship between the parents (if there are two)—harmonious
relationships support healthy adjustment of children while significant conflict
impedes it; and iii) adequate resources.
This is widely recognized among child development researchers and a topic
about which there is consensus in the field.
The scientific research also shows that these same three
factors correlate with children’s adjustment in all sorts of family forms. If the quality of the parent-child
relationships is good, the relationship between the parents is harmonious (if
there are two), and there are adequate resources, children develop equally well
in a range of “non-traditional” family environments, e.g., divorced families,
single parent families, families with employed mothers and stay at home fathers,
and families in which children spend time in day care. This is widely accepted among child
development researchers and a matter of consensus within the field.
Thus, before the commencement of scientific research studying
children of gay parents, there was no basis to start with the assumption that
being raised by gay parents would have adverse effects on children.
When researchers did study gay parents and their children,
they consistently found that gay people do not differ from heterosexuals in
terms of the quality of their parenting and that children raised by gay parents
are just as well adjusted psychologically, socially and academically as children
raised by heterosexual parents.
Numerous studies of gay parent families have been conducted
by various well-respected developmental psychologists since the 1970s.
This body of research includes studies that compare children
raised since birth in same-sex and married heterosexual couple families, studies
of subjects drawn from representative samples, longitudinal studies following
subjects over a period of time, and some studies of families with gay adoptive
parents.
The findings were uniform; not a single one of these studies
found an elevated rate of adjustment problems among children raised by gay
parents.
That being raised by gay parents has no adverse impact on
children’s healthy adjustment is a topic of consensus within all of the
professional fields dedicated to children’s health and welfare—psychology,
psychiatry, pediatrics, social work and child welfare. The major national professional
associations in those fields, including the American Psychological Association,
the American Psychiatric Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National
Association of Social Workers and the Child Welfare League of America, have
taken public positions against restrictions on placing children with gay
parents.
Testimony rebutting
the various justifications the state offered in support of the
ban
Psychiatric disorders
/ substance abuse – Dr. Susan Cochran
Experts for the state testified that higher rates of
psychiatric disorders such as depression, anxiety and substance abuse within the
gay community justify categorically banning all gay people from adopting.
Dr. Cochran testified that there are disparities in rates of
psychiatric disorders across various demographic lines. While gay people as a group suffer a
somewhat higher rate of psychiatric disorders than the general population, there
are other demographic characteristics such as ethnicity and income that
correlate with similar or higher rates of psychiatric disorders yet those groups
aren’t excluded from adopting.
There are people who abuse drugs or have other psychiatric
disorders in every demographic group.
That’s why all adoption applicants are individually screened as opposed
to judged based on the demographic groups they are part of.
Homosexuality itself isn’t considered a mental disorder by
the psychiatric profession.
Relationship
instability – Dr. Anne Peplau
Experts for the state argued that gay couples have unstable
relationships.
Dr. Peplau testified that many same-sex couples have stable,
enduring relationships.
Some people in all groups—including gay people and
heterosexuals—have stable relationships and some don’t (as evidenced by the high
divorce rate).
Relationship breakup rates vary across demographic
groups. Other demographic
characteristics that are not excluded from adopting have higher correlations
with relationship break ups than sexual orientation.
The same factors that predict breakups among heterosexual
couples predict breakups among same-sex couples; thus, couple stability can be
evaluated as effectively for gay couples as for heterosexual couples.
Domestic violence-
Dr. Anne Peplau
An expert for the state argued that gay people are more prone
to domestic violence.
Dr. Peplau testified that there is no basis for saying this
and that, in fact, studies show that the highest rate of domestic violence is
experienced by women in heterosexual relationships and that the rates for people
in same-sex couples and men in heterosexual relationships are all lower.
The sexual
orientation of the children – Dr. Frederick Berlin
Experts for the state argued that having gay parents could
make children gay.
Dr. Berlin testified that the sexual orientation
of parents doesn’t determine the sexual orientation of their children. The overwhelming majority of gay people
were raised by heterosexual parents and the overwhelming majority of children
raised by gay parents are heterosexual. [[ROB- is there some reason you didn’t
want to include this point?
Scientific research has found no differences in the rates of those who
identified as gay among those raised by gay and heterosexual parents.
Placing children for adoption with gay parents does not cause
them to become gay. There is no
evidence that being raised by a gay parent might make a child develop same-sex
attractions.
Stigma – Dr. Michael
Lamb
An expert for the state argued that the societal
discrimination that gay people suffer is a reason to discriminate against gay
people when it comes to adoption.
He argued that societal prejudice against gay parents would adversely
affect children raised by gay parents.
However, Dr. Lamb testified that research on gay parent
families uniformly found that the healthy development of children raised by gay
parents isn’t harmed by societal prejudice against their parents. Children of
gay parents fare just as well as children of heterosexuals in social development
and peer relationships.
Research also shows that children can experience negative
peer reactions to all sorts of things about them or their families that are
perceived as differences, e.g. their parents’ ethnic background or appearance,
and that children of gay parents are no more likely than other children to
experience peer rejection or teasing.
The “kids need a
mother and a father” argument – Dr. Michael Lamb
The State’s lawyers argued that children develop best when
they have a mother and a father, although they presented no expert testimony to
support this view.
Dr. Michael Lamb testified that the research confirms that
children of same-sex couples develop just as well as children of married
heterosexual couples, and that men and women have equal capacity to be good
parents.
While research shows that children in two-parent families are
more likely to be well-adjusted than children raised in single-parent families,
it also shows that this disparity is about the number of parents, not the gender
of the parents.
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