News

In a new book, “Deep House,” the author Jeremy Atherton Lin combines memoir and cultural history to expose the varied border ...
Clockwise from top: Jim Obergefell after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide on June 26, 2015. At home, a framed photo of his late husband, John Arthur, who died of ALS before ...
Twenty-nine years ago, in 1996, a Democratic president, Bill Clinton, signed the Defense of Marriage Act, which defined marriage as between a man and a woman. But today, a decade after the Supreme ...
Jim Obergefell, plaintiff in the landmark Supreme Court case that legalized gay marriage in all 50 states, reflects on the decision 10 years later and the LGBTQ community's current civil rights fight.
Although same-sex marriage is currently protected in all 50 states due to the ruling in Obergefell vs. Hodges in 2015, Justice Clarence Thomas has said he would like to "reconsider" that ruling if ...
Adam Liptak describes the moment in which same-sex marriage became legal nationwide on June 26, 2015 — and what the future may hold for the Supreme Court’s ruling.