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The Right to Be Out: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in America's Public Schools. By Stuart Biegel. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010. 300 pp. $19.95 paper.

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The Right to Be Out: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in America's Public Schools. By Stuart Biegel. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010. 300 pp. $19.95 paper.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Joe Rollins*
Affiliation:
City University of New York
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
© 2012 Law and Society Association.

Stuart Biegel's The Right to Be Out offers an expansive treatment of the legal and policy issues facing LGBT students and educators in America's public schools. Separated into two parts, the first surveys “the legal principles underlying the right to be out,” and the second “sets forth the research-based principles that inform a proactive focus on school climate” (p. xix). Both parts begin with an introductory overview that is followed by three case studies. The author describes the project as “a series of building blocks, with each chapter expanding on what has come before.” Although the book stands as an integrated whole, “each of the eight chapters is also designed to stand alone” (p. xix).

Chapter 1, “The Legal Foundations of the Right to Be Out,” begins with the observation that the right to be out is a combination of First and Fourteenth Amendment principles. Here, the author quickly summarizes and synthesizes key public forum and right-to-an-education cases before turning brief attention to the student organization cases of the 1970s and 1980s. The story of Jamie Nabozny, a Wisconsin teenager who suffered relentless torment at the hands of his classmates while school officials ignored his pleas for help, is given slightly greater attention in order to spotlight waning judicial tolerance for such cavalier administrative apathy. Nabozny sued and ultimately won a sizable settlement in federal court, a success from which Biegel draws a hopeful jurisprudential conclusion: “all such treatment must end” (p. 12). Discussions of Lawrence v. Texas (2003) and a selection of Religion Clause cases are then marshaled in support of the author's argument that in educational settings there is constitutional support for a right to be out.

Chapters 2, 3, and 4, address, respectively: the emerging rights of LGBT students; challenges for LGBT educators; and curriculum, religion, morality, and values. Echoing Nabozny, what Chapter 2 shows most clearly is that while LGBT students were once seen as the disruptive problem in educational settings, judges have begun to understand that bullying and administrative disregard are the intolerable behaviors that must be changed. Chapter 3 shows that something similar is becoming true for LGBT educators. Whereas LGBT educators were once almost certainly subject to dismissal if they came out, courts have started to protect their right to be out on the job. Chapter 4 deals with the thornier problem of balancing LGBT curriculum and free-speech issues with religious and moral objections. Here, Biegel strives admirably, and optimistically, to find the middle ground in a controversy that is unlikely to go away any time soon.

Part II turns attention to education policy in an effort to guide professional development for administrators, set forth creative initiatives to address school climate, and address LGBT-specific programs. Drawing from research in the field of education, Biegel notes, “the sum total of all the research-based implications in this section is that a truly effective education process cannot be limited to either basic skills or traditional curricular content but must also include goals and objectives that focus on the building of social intelligence and emotional acumen” (p. 115). Chapter 6 suggests ways that teachers can bring LGBT content into the classroom and curriculum, Chapter 7 considers issues related to school sports, and Chapter 8 outlines the problems faced by transgender youth. The conclusion moves from Alan Drury's 1959 novel Advise and Consent to the story of Harvey Milk (and others), seemingly to demonstrate the educational necessity of visibility and acceptance if LGBT youth are to be prepared for successful, productive, survivable futures.

The Right to Be Out will be of greatest use and interest to readers in the field of education. Legal scholars and those versed in the study of sexuality will have already found these cases, issues, histories, and arguments treated in greater depth and with fuller analysis elsewhere. The book's one persistent shortcoming stems from the author's propensity for speculation. For example, we read about what might have happened if a case had gone forward (p. 64); what school officials “might have concluded” (p. 68); that possible case outcomes are “highly doubtful” (p. 95–96). Other stories related in the book, such as those about professional athletes, are interesting but feel somewhat tangential to the central project. Nonetheless, by bringing these materials together in a schematic and accessible manner, Biegel has provided, bravely, a useful service for those who need it most. The trenchant problems addressed by the book are today felt most keenly by those on the front lines of the battle for LGBT rights—kids—and any effort put forth on their behalf is laudable.