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Testacy and Intestacy Demographics

Alyssa-dirussoAlyssa A. DiRusso (associate professor of law, Cumberland School of Law) has posted on SSRN her article entitled Testacy and Intestacy: The Dynamics of Wills and Demographic Status, 23. Quinnipac Prob. L.J. 36 (2009). 

An abstract of the article is below:

In this Article, I seek to investigate several questions relating to testacy and intestacy. First, who is intestate? Are there demographic characteristics that predict intestacy and is there a class divide among whom the law serves? (Statistical analyses of original empirical data are used to shed light on these issues.) Next, does intestacy matter – what are the consequences of intestacy? Finally, what does intestacy mean or signify? On a theoretical and abstract level, how can we characterize intestacy – how do we define it, and how does it define us?

These questions, when carefully considered, lead to a theory: that there is a connection between hierarchical socio-demographic roles and the legal status of testacy or intestacy that parallels these roles. Specifically, I compare the dynamics created by testacy/intestacy and analogize to the roles created by men/women and whites/non-whites, and argue that the overlap between the individuals who fill each status role is not coincidental. Finally, I develop the theory that when hierarchical status is created by law, there may be a connection to social status in filling those roles. More explicitly, when we identify areas of the law that create the dominant/non-dominant dynamic we tend to see in race and sex relationships, we should scrutinize the law to determine whether it is a reflection of – or possibly a contributor to – the dynamics of race and sex.