2021 Articles
Living Freely Behind Bars: Reframing the Due Process Rights of Transgender Prisoners
Federal constitutional jurisprudence, as it stands today, provides insufficient protections for transgender individuals who are incarcerated. Transgender prisoners face high rates of physical and sexual assault, harassment, and other mistreatment by state and federal prison officials and individuals incarcerated with them. Commonly pursued avenues for relief—namely the Eighth Amendment, the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the right to privacy—present hurdles in the form of too-hard-to-meet legal standards, and they perpetuate harmful stereotypes and cultural norms that should occupy no place in modern constitutional law. This Note proposes that, instead of relying on these inadequate constitutional claims to vindicate their rights, transgender prisoners and their advocates should consider litigating under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, articulating a right to live freely in accordance with one’s gender identity. Recognition of such a right would enable plaintiffs to utilize more favorable substantive due process legal standards and eschew perpetuating outdated notions of gender within the law.
Files
- Ortlip-Sommers_2021_Living Freely Behind Bars.pdf application/pdf 673 KB Download File
Also Published In
- Title
- Columbia Journal of Gender and Law
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.52214/cjgl.v40i3.8599
More About This Work
- Published Here
- August 29, 2022