Jennifer Roback Morse


Jennifer Roback Morse is an economist, a writer and a Catholic social conservative. She is the president and founder of the Ruth Institute, an organization opposed to same-sex marriage.

Early life and education

Jennifer Anne Roback was born November 12, 1953, in Columbus, Ohio, where she was raised in the Catholic faith. She attended Oberlin College and completed her baccalaureate degree at Ohio State University, discovering "the free-market thinking that would form the initial basis of her professional life". As a graduate student at the University of Rochester, she became attracted to libertarianism. She earned her doctorate in 1980, with a dissertation entitled The value of local urban amenities: theory and measurement.
In the 1970s she had an abortion and divorced her first husband. She married Robert Morse in 1984. She regretted her abortion, and returned to the Catholic faith of her youth. Because they had been unable to have children, the couple adopted a two-year-old boy from Romania in April 1991; she gave birth to a daughter in October 1991.

Career

In 1985, James Buchanan recruited Morse to teach economics at George Mason University. She became tenured faculty, "teaching courses on microeconomics and researching the economic history of the Civil War". Her husband did not like the Washington, D.C., area, though, and they moved to Silicon Valley in California, and later to San Diego. She published Love & Economics in 2001.
Morse has worked as a part-time research fellow at the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty, taught at Yale, and also served as a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.
Morse founded the Ruth Institute in 2008 in San Marcos, California. The Ruth Institute was an arm of the National Organization for Marriage, which opposed the legalization of same-sex marriage. Morse became "an official spokesman for Proposition 8", a 2008 California ballot measure which amended the California Constitution with the sentence, "Only marriage between a man and a woman is valid or recognized in California." By November 1, 2013, the Ruth Institute was independent of NOM.
In 2013, the Ruth Institute was designated as an anti-LGBT hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Following publication of the Department of Justice Guidelines to Ensure the Civil Rights of Transgender Students in 2016, Morse responded with objections that the guidelines are "far-reaching" and "of questionable legality". In 2017, Vanco stopped processing online payments for the Institute stating, "The organization has been flagged by Card Brands as being affiliated with a product/service that promotes hate, violence, harassment and/or abuse."
Our Sunday Visitor named Morse one of nine 2013 Catholic Stars, leaders who "have renewed, encouraged and inspired in the Faith".
Morse signed the 2017 Nashville Statement, affirming a complementarian view of gender and a traditionalist view of sexuality.

Selected publications

In 2005, Morse published Smart Sex: Finding Life-long Love in a Hook-up World, which detailed her beliefs in favor of heterosexual marriage. Her other publications include: