Penn Calendar Penn A-Z School of Arts and Sciences University of Pennsylvania

Difference and Democracy: New Perspectives on the Politics of Parenthood

Wednesday, March 19, 2025 - 12:00pm to 1:15pm

Online Event: Zoom

Join us for an exploration into evolving notions of parenthood, law, and identity with scholars Akshat Agarwal and Carlo Sariego.

Akshat Agarwal, Visiting Assistant Professor at Boston College School of Law, will present "Constitutional Parents’ Rights and the Transformation of Parenthood." He examines how constitutional parents’ rights shape the recognition of non-traditional families, including LGBTQ+ families and those formed through assisted reproductive technologies. Using comparative insights from English law, Agarwal reveals how changing definitions of parenthood reflect deeper debates about equality and parental authority. Click here to access paper.

Carlo Sariego, PhD Candidate in Sociology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Yale, will share their paper, "Transfeminist Pregnancy: Reproductive Speculation, Genre, and Desire." Sariego explores the intersection of reproductive and transgender politics, arguing for an expansive understanding of pregnancy as a multidimensional experience—political, aesthetic, and existential—that transcends biological determinism and fosters solidarity between trans and cis feminist communities. Sariego's paper is under consideration for a journal and cannot be made public before the talk.

 

Come discover fresh perspectives on how contemporary debates on parenthood shape democracy.

REGISTRATION REQUIRED: CLICK HERE TO REGISTER

---------
Speaker bios:

Akshat Agarwal:  Akshat Agarwal is a doctoral candidate at Yale Law School working on the legal regulation of the family. His dissertation explores how concepts such as parenthood, parents’ rights and children’s interests change as the law responds to this rise of non-traditional families. Apart from the family, his research interests include constitutional law, and global political economy with a regional focus on South Asia.  He will be starting as Visiting Assistant Professor of Law at the Boston College School of Law this Fall.

Carlo Sariego: Carlo Sariego is a PhD Candidate at Yale in the joint-degree program in Sociology and Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. They use qualitative and queer/feminist methods to analyze the racialized and gendered social, cultural, and historical processes that shape the politics of reproduction and family in the United States. Their work has been published in Signs, Feminist Theory, Social Science and Medicine, and Population Studies.


Paper abstracts:

Constitutional Parents’ Rights and the Transformation of Parenthood
By Akshat Agarwal
 
This Article argues that constitutional parents’ rights are essential to understanding parenthood law’s transformation to recognize non-traditional families. Such families, which include families formed through assisted reproductive technologies, LGBTQ+ families, and families in which non-parental caregivers perform parental roles, require the recognition of a non-parent’s relationship with the child. Yet the constitutionalization of parents’ rights—by granting parents the right to exclude non-parents from accessing parental rights and responsibilities—makes it harder for a non-parent to form a relationship with a child over a parent’s objection. Because constitutional law thus situates parenthood as an exclusive status, law-reform efforts have focused not on extending parental rights and responsibilities to non-parents but on expanding the legal definition of parenthood itself. In that way, parenthood has, perhaps counterintuitively, become more inclusive. This means that constitutional parents’ rights have not only made parenthood law a site of deep contestation over children’s interests and parental authority but also equality. This Article makes this argument by using English law, from which American family law descends but where parents’ rights are not similarly constitutionalized, as a comparative foil.
This Article makes three significant contributions to existing literature. First, it
explains how the constitutionalization of parents’ rights structures parenthood law and what that means for the recognition of non-traditional families. Second, it offers a different perspective on parents’ rights by showing how a focus on parents’ interests can contribute to a progressive emphasis on the equality of non-traditional families. Last, by using English law as a refractive lens for understanding American law it offers a novel method for doing comparative law.
 
Transfeminist Pregnancy: Reproductive Speculation, Genre, and Desire
By Carlo Sariego

 


In the explosion of abortion bills post-Dobbs, anti-abortion language identifies women according to their reproductive potential: “Woman, and ‘women’, include any person with a uterus, regardless of any gender identity.”  According to this definition, if one is pregnant or capable of becoming pregnant, one is a woman. Women without uteruses (cis and trans) are excluded, and trans men with uteruses are enfolded back into being women. This reproductive language, which tethers together transgender and reproductive politics, requires a reassessment of how pregnancy is theorized in feminist and transgender studies. In this article, I argue that pregnancy is not to be defined by biological phenomena but instead as a genre of racialized political, aesthetic, and affective experience and expectation. As a multi-dimensional genre of experience, rather than merely a biological datum, pregnancy can potentially establish a shared ground between trans and cis women. Pregnancy is an existential experience involving birth and becoming in a larger sense. We need a more all-encompassing notion of pregnancy, which is nourished by the capacious social world of conception and of giving new life, and that breaks from genre conventions of racial nationalism. Such a definition of pregnancy supports the goal of feminists, who resist the reduction of womanhood to reproductive function. For transgender studies, a wider understanding of pregnancy helps to build a transsexual theory of reproduction on feminist grounds. To make this argument, I introduce three sub-genres of transgender pregnancies as case studies. From different angles, these sub-genres each expand the definition of pregnancy: performance, transition, and labor.