TY - JOUR
T1 - Beyond Lawrence
T2 - Metaprivacy and punishment
AU - Greene, Jamal
PY - 2006
Y1 - 2006
N2 - Lawrence v. Texas remains, after three years of precedential life, an opinion in search of a principle. It is both libertarian-Randy Barnett has called it the constitutionalization of John Stuart Mill's On Liberty-and communitarian-William Eskridge has described it as the gay rights movement's Brown v. Board of Education. It is simultaneously broad, in its evocation of our deepest spiritual commitments, and narrow, in its self-conscious attempts to avoid condemning laws against same-sex marriage, prostitution, and bestiality. This Article reconciles these competing claims on Lawrence's jurisprudential legacy. In Part I, it defends the view that Lawence constitutionalizes what I call "metaprivacy": When societal consensus internalizes a breach of the historical legal divide between particular "conduct" and an associated "status," punishment of that conduct cannot be based on moral approbation alone. The Article then, in Part II, harmonizes this view of Lawrence's legacy with prz-Lawrence constitutional privacy doctrine and theory. Finally, in Part III, the Article applies this understanding of Lawrence interdoctrinally, to capital sentencing. The Article suggests that all that separates the impermissible moral judgments made by a legislature in prohibiting sodomy from the permissible-indeed, almost constitutionally required-moral judgments made during the sentencing phase of a capital trial is a preference for gays over other a priori criminals. Notwithstanding the obvious appeal of permitting such a preference, Lawrence provides no support for it.
AB - Lawrence v. Texas remains, after three years of precedential life, an opinion in search of a principle. It is both libertarian-Randy Barnett has called it the constitutionalization of John Stuart Mill's On Liberty-and communitarian-William Eskridge has described it as the gay rights movement's Brown v. Board of Education. It is simultaneously broad, in its evocation of our deepest spiritual commitments, and narrow, in its self-conscious attempts to avoid condemning laws against same-sex marriage, prostitution, and bestiality. This Article reconciles these competing claims on Lawrence's jurisprudential legacy. In Part I, it defends the view that Lawence constitutionalizes what I call "metaprivacy": When societal consensus internalizes a breach of the historical legal divide between particular "conduct" and an associated "status," punishment of that conduct cannot be based on moral approbation alone. The Article then, in Part II, harmonizes this view of Lawrence's legacy with prz-Lawrence constitutional privacy doctrine and theory. Finally, in Part III, the Article applies this understanding of Lawrence interdoctrinally, to capital sentencing. The Article suggests that all that separates the impermissible moral judgments made by a legislature in prohibiting sodomy from the permissible-indeed, almost constitutionally required-moral judgments made during the sentencing phase of a capital trial is a preference for gays over other a priori criminals. Notwithstanding the obvious appeal of permitting such a preference, Lawrence provides no support for it.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33745354695&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=33745354695&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2307/20455675
DO - 10.2307/20455675
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:33745354695
SN - 0044-0094
VL - 115
SP - 1862
EP - 1928
JO - Yale Law Journal
JF - Yale Law Journal
IS - 8
ER -