2011
DOI: 10.3917/cpc.037.0231
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Homoparentalité et sexualité

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…in [35]) called "private patriarchy" since the ideal context for motherhood mentioned by judges 2 and 5 always requires the (sexually) determinant presence of a man. These are, in fact, the same interviewees who argue that a child's "healthy" development requires the presence of both father and mother, based on the arguable idea according to which "the mere fact of being a heterosexual is equivalent to otherness and the acknowledgement of sex [gender] difference" ( [36], p. 232). In this context, lesbian motherhood is the subject of ambivalence: However, as Borrillo ([23], p. 368) stated, this reasoning questions the very foundation of filiation consecrated in Civil Law, which highlights its social rather than biological character [37,38].…”
Section: Judges and Lesbian Motherhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in [35]) called "private patriarchy" since the ideal context for motherhood mentioned by judges 2 and 5 always requires the (sexually) determinant presence of a man. These are, in fact, the same interviewees who argue that a child's "healthy" development requires the presence of both father and mother, based on the arguable idea according to which "the mere fact of being a heterosexual is equivalent to otherness and the acknowledgement of sex [gender] difference" ( [36], p. 232). In this context, lesbian motherhood is the subject of ambivalence: However, as Borrillo ([23], p. 368) stated, this reasoning questions the very foundation of filiation consecrated in Civil Law, which highlights its social rather than biological character [37,38].…”
Section: Judges and Lesbian Motherhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%