Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T09:26:33.975Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Girls on the Stand: How Courts Fail Pregnant Minors. By Helena Silverstein. New York: NYU Press, 2007. Pp. 256. $40.00 cloth; $22.00 paper.

Review products

Girls on the Stand: How Courts Fail Pregnant Minors. By Helena Silverstein. New York: NYU Press, 2007. Pp. 256. $40.00 cloth; $22.00 paper.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

John Brigham*
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© 2009 Law and Society Association.

There are many wonderful things about the research reported in this intimate study of the role of law in our collective life. One is its intimacy. It is “intimate” on a number of levels, including the subject matter and the treatment of law. The book is about what it means to be intimate in our society and to want to keep things from the people in one's life. This protection is sometimes ignored in the name of the public good and sometimes due to the preferences of those charged with carrying out the law.

The book's challenge is not just social, though it pays close attention to how society treats pregnant teenagers. It is also legal in that it raises new questions that go beyond how law deals with intimacy to what we can expect of law as it operates in the United States. This is a vivid portrayal of a politically charged area of research that ultimately empowers us with a deep knowledge of legal practice.

Silverstein's research takes an important question, “How do judicial bypass provisions work?” and finds out by asking people who should know—the secretaries, clerks, advocates, and judges whose job it is to provide the bypass option. It is simple but it is also very impressive and results in scholarship that is thoughtful and compassionate as well as beautifully written. It involves research in opinions, interviews, and attention to public discussion of the issues. The resulting mix of gritty and careful observation with penetrating analysis and social theory makes a great book.

The picture presented in the research is far different from even the rosy official story of how America treats its daughters when they are “in trouble.” Silverstein points this out with her findings of incredible resistance to the law by those charged with enforcing it as well as deep and often self-serving ignorance of provisions meant to protect pregnant minors.

She also adds relevant material from the world of law more generally. One telling source is Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia's impatience in 2005 at oral argument for Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood (126 S. Ct. 961 [2006]) with the idea that the judicial consent requirement in New Hampshire might endanger a woman's life. In the justice's optimistic view, judicial bypass was “a quick 30 second phone call” (p. 177).

Silverstein presents a very different story. Looking closely at Alabama, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee but also drawing on research from Texas, Massachusetts, North and South Carolina, Indiana, Florida, Mississippi, Ohio, and Minnesota, she shows the judiciary to be unprepared, partisan, and often simply uncaring when it comes to pregnant teenagers. In South Carolina, for instance, one of the few judges in the state willing to hear bypass petitions would only hear them for women in his own county.

Silverstein's insights about how law works are closely documented and delivered with restraint. She includes Peter Edelman's testimony at the John Roberts confirmation hearing that held the future Chief Justice to be “remarkably disingenuous” in describing what an appellate judge does as being like that of an umpire who calls balls and strikes. Silverstein would have us take into account the implications of current American judicial practice, which is more like umpiring from “two steps to the right of the strike zone” (p. 176).

I was struck when first reading Girls on the Stand in spring 2008 by the various movies at the time about pregnancy that told a very different story. Movies like “Knocked Up,”“Juno,” and “Baby Mama” make various unplanned or unusual aspects of pregnancy kind of fun. This fun aspect seemed new to me. And it is not part of the book. In my generation, sex was usually considered dangerous, and disfavor if not death was likely to accompany unwed pregnancy.

These movies are a very powerful counterpoint to Silverstein's treatment. It is almost as if they represent a “reverse” of the kind of gap law-and-society research was based on, the one between the ideal of law and the seedy reality of the world. With regard to pregnancy, we have a kind of subverted ideal. Law is an ominous and partisan authority, while unplanned pregnancy is newly cute. Where the popular culture view of pregnancy is upbeat and optimistic, the law is unfeeling and imperious. The convention has been turned on its head.

This picture is very different from the generally rollicking good time had by Juno McGuff and other pregnant movie stars. This is a powerful picture with scholarship challenging not just the law, but the status quo as well. This is one of the few books in my field that actually feels like it was written in order to save lives.

References

Case Cited

Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood 126 S. Ct. 961 (2006).Google Scholar