Changing Name Changing: Framing Rules and the Future of Marital Names

IF 1.9 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW University of Chicago Law Review Pub Date : 2008-05-06 DOI:10.7916/D8Z0385D
Elizabeth F. Emens
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引用次数: 40

Abstract

Marital names shape our ideas about marriage, about our children, and about our selves. For about a hundred years, American states required married women to take their husbands' names in order to engage in basic civic activities such as voting. While the law no longer requires women to change their names, it still shapes people's decisions about marital names in both formal and informal ways. For example, the formal legal default rule in most places is that both spouses keep their premarital names. This rule is minoritarian for women, which means it imposes a range of social costs on women who make the most conventional naming choice. But the rule is majoritarian for men, which means it does nothing to unsettle the most robust aspect of our current marital naming conventions - the fact that men almost never change their names, even to hyphenate. This fact about men's names - coupled with the fact that children almost always have their father's name, even if their mother makes an unconventional naming choice for herself - means that women are ostensibly choosing their marital names, but in fact they are choosing from a very limited decision set. That is, women effectively can have nominal continuity either with their past (their families of origin and premarital selves) or with their future (their children and possibly their spouse), but not across all three generations. The formal legal default that both spouses keep their names reinforces this bind for women. Informally, legal institutions also shape choices through desk-clerk law, that is, advice given by the government functionaries who answer public inquiries at state and local agencies. These legal actors frequently mislead people and discourage unconventional naming choices as a result of ignorance or their own views about proper practice. Because states historically reinforced a regime of patrilineal descent of names, what might seem a neutral default regime is inadequate. States should set defaults and frame choices to encourage more egalitarian decisions about whether to change names and how. States could try any number of creative solutions using existing categories for thinking about choice regimes, drawn from contract-law theory: default rules (what rule the state fills in if the parties don't speak to the contrary); menus (what range of options parties are given); and altering rules (what steps parties must take to contract around the default rule into different alternatives). Most modestly, states could adopt a forced choosing approach, requiring both spouses to state their postmarital names. More ambitiously, states might encourage hyphenation and, at the next generation, biphenation - defined as the passing of one name from each hyphenated parent - by making this the default option. States could also create what might be called framing rules, which would dictate how the state asks the question of parties in a choice regime. Framing rules encompass what information the state gives parties, what words it uses, what context surrounds the question, as well as the timing of the question. Framing rules are particularly important in contexts, such as marital names, where social conventions exert a strong influence on choices, and where desk-clerk law is likely to be erroneous or misleading.
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改变名字:框架规则和婚姻名字的未来
婚名塑造了我们对婚姻、孩子和自我的看法。在大约一百年的时间里,美国各州要求已婚妇女随其丈夫的姓,以便参加投票等基本的公民活动。虽然法律不再要求女性改名,但它仍然以正式和非正式的方式影响着人们对婚姻姓氏的决定。例如,在大多数地方,正式的法律默认规则是夫妻双方保留婚前的名字。这条规则对女性来说是少数人的,这意味着它给那些选择最传统的名字的女性施加了一系列的社会成本。但这条规则对男性来说是多数主义的,这意味着它不会动摇我们目前婚姻命名惯例中最牢固的一面——事实上,男性几乎从不改变他们的名字,即使是连字符。男人名字的这一事实——再加上孩子几乎总是随父亲的名字,即使他们的母亲给自己取了一个非常规的名字——意味着表面上是女性在选择她们的结婚名字,但实际上她们的选择范围非常有限。也就是说,女性实际上可以与她们的过去(原籍家庭和婚前自我)或未来(她们的孩子,可能还有配偶)保持名义上的连续性,但不能跨越三代。正式的法律默认,夫妻双方都保留自己的名字,这加强了女性的这种束缚。非正式地,法律机构还通过“案记员法”(desk-clerk law)来塑造选择,即由在州和地方机构回答公众询问的政府官员提供建议。这些法律行为者经常误导人们,由于无知或他们自己对正确做法的看法,他们不鼓励非传统的命名选择。由于国家在历史上强化了姓氏的父系血统制度,看似中立的默认制度是不够的。各州应该设定默认值并制定选择框架,以鼓励在是否改名以及如何改名方面做出更平等的决定。各州可以尝试任何创造性的解决方案,使用现有的类别来思考选择制度,从合同法理论中得出:默认规则(如果各方不反对,国家填写什么规则);菜单(提供给各方的选择范围);以及改变规则(各方必须采取哪些步骤来绕过默认规则,形成不同的替代规则)。最温和的做法是,各州可以采取强制选择的方式,要求夫妻双方说出他们的婚后姓名。更有野心的是,各州可能会鼓励使用连字符,并在下一代采用双字符——定义为从每个使用连字符的父母那里继承一个名字——将其作为默认选项。各州还可以制定所谓的框架规则,这将规定各州如何在选择制度中向各方提出问题。框架规则包括国家向当事人提供的信息、使用的词语、围绕问题的上下文以及问题的时间。框架规则在某些情况下尤其重要,例如婚姻姓名,在这些情况下,社会习俗对选择有很大影响,而文书法可能是错误或误导的。
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期刊介绍: The University of Chicago Law Review is a quarterly journal of legal scholarship. Often cited in Supreme Court and other court opinions, as well as in other scholarly works, it is among the most influential journals in the field. Students have full responsibility for editing and publishing the Law Review; they also contribute original scholarship of their own. The Law Review"s editorial board selects all pieces for publication and, with the assistance of staff members, performs substantive and technical edits on each of these pieces prior to publication.
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