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Still, the tradition of bypassing women just because of their gender jars with current thinking -- especially when even the monarchy is getting rid of sexism in the succession to the throne. That means that if Prince William and Kate have a girl first, she will become queen, and no younger brother will be able to jump the line and get ahead of her. Those changes have prompted many to ask: Why not take the reforms to the aristocrats as well? The short answer is that it is much easier said than done. Some conservatives fear change and tinkering with age-old tradition, and many argue that the rules involved are too complicated to reform. The issue also doesn't just concern one family -- as in the royals -- but affects hundreds. And any reform, which would need to be passed by parliament, could potentially sow confusion and resentment over inheritance among existing heirs and their siblings. Titles can't be split, and splitting a mansion isn't always a good idea either. "Inheriting a great draughty mansion with obligations is not everybody's idea of fun in 2013. Even worse is to inherit a minority interest in it -- for example, a split between five heirs," said Roderick Balfour, an earl who has four daughters and no son. Balfour recently wrote to the government to propose a compromise: A title should pass to first-born daughters, but only in cases when there is no son. It's not exactly gender equality, he said, but it would at least present a workable solution to families like his. Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg has said he was "sympathetic" to extending the royal reforms to titles, but the government has indicated it isn't going to act soon to tackle the issue -- not least because few Britons are likely to rally behind moves to preserve the nobility. James Gray, a campaigner for the anti-monarchy group Republic, concedes that the international success of "Downton Abbey" -- which has won millions of fans in the U.S. and elsewhere -- may signal a widespread fascination with the lives of blue bloods, but that doesn't mean people at home admire or want to emulate a crusty upper class. He raised another point: Since monarchy and aristocracy are inherently unfair and discriminatory, some may see achieving gender equality in those institutions as redundant. "I think most people accept that hereditary power is wrong," Gray said. "Noble titles are more of an oddity now -- there's perhaps a fascination, but it's a curiosity rather than something people look up to anymore."
[Associated
Press;
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