Cardozo Law Review
Abstract
Children are born equal. Yet as early as eighteen months, hierarchies emerge among children. These hierarchies are not random butfall into patterns by race, gender, and class. They are not caused nor voluntarily chosen by children or their parents. The hierarchies grow, persist, and are made worse by systems and policies created by the state, perpetuating the position of the privileged and continuing the disadvantage of the subordinated. Children's equal right to develop to their capacity is severely undermined by policies and structures that hamper and block the development of some by creating barriers and challenges or failing to support them.
This Article argues that hierarchies among children violate their constitutional rights, by both the infliction of harm and the failure to provide affirmative support. It documents how our policies and structures reinscribe inequality on children and proposes a constitutional obligation to the contrary. The Article takes on the challenge of articulating a general constitutional theory of children's rights, suggesting that children's status, circumstances, and needs are the basis for a distinctive claim of positive rights
Among the most critical of those positive rights is the right to developmental equality: the right of every child to maximize their developmental potential. Equality of development is a universal right of every child based on the principles of equality, equity, and dignity at the core of our equal protection jurisprudence. To make this claim, the Article unearths existing hierarchies and identifies the parameters of children's equality that are constitutionally meaningful. It then grounds a proposal for children's constitutional rights, including a positive right to developmental equality, in existing constitutional doctrine.
Disciplines
Banking and Finance Law | Civil Rights and Discrimination | Constitutional Law | Immigration Law | Juvenile Law | Law | Law and Gender | Law and Race | Law and Society
Recommended Citation
Nancy E. Dowd,
Children's Equality Rights: Every Child's Right to Develop to Their Full Capacity,
41
Cardozo L. Rev.
1367
(2020).
Available at:
https://larc.cardozo.yu.edu/clr/vol41/iss4/4
Included in
Banking and Finance Law Commons, Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Constitutional Law Commons, Immigration Law Commons, Juvenile Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, Law and Race Commons, Law and Society Commons