Education is the “very foundation of good citizenship,” wrote Justice Earl Warren in his 1954 opinion for Brown v. Board of Education. [1] Nearly twenty years later, in Wisconsin v. Yoder (1972), Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote that “some degree of education is necessary to prepare citizens to participate effectively and intelligently in our open political system.” [2] Often, however, public school curricula lack civic education requirements, and thus do not adequately prepare citizens to understand and engage with the United States’ democratic system of government.
Read MoreThe Dvash-Banks case illuminates how the State Department abuses bureaucratic policy to prefer children biologically related to both married parents and how the government manipulates citizenship law to enforce heteronormativity within the American nation state.
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