Family Law in a Changing America

Family Law in a Changing America

Author: Douglas NeJaime

Publisher: Aspen Publishing

Published: 2020-09-15

Total Pages: 1152

ISBN-13: 1543823211

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Family Law in a Changing America is a new casebook that highlights law and family patterns as they are now, not as they were decades ago. By focusing on key changes in family life, the casebook attends to rising equality and inequality within and among families. The law, formally at least, accords more equality and autonomy than ever before, having repudiated hierarchies based on race, gender, and sexuality. Yet, as our society has grown more economically unequal, so too have family patterns diverged—with marriage and marital child-rearing becoming a mark of privilege. A number of developments—mass incarceration, the privatization of care, and reproductive technologies—have also contributed to disparities based on race, class, and gender. The casebook reflects the law’s continuing emphasis on marriage, but also treats nonmarital families as central. Rather than privilege the marital heterosexual family, the casebook organizes the presentation of the law around 1) adult relationships and 2) parent-child relationships. Professors and students will benefit from: Text that includes dramatic changes in family patterns in contemporary society, including: declining marriage rates, with differential rates based on race and class; increasing rates of nonmarital cohabitation and nonmarital parenting; the use of assisted reproduction and its challenge to biological understandings of parentage; tensions between women’s increasing education and employment and the perseverance of the gendered division of labor in families; the inclusion of same-sex couples in marriage and parenthood An approach that decenters the marital heterosexual family and instead is structured around the general topics of adult relationships and parent-child relationships Focus on the scope of family law, including extensive coverage of crucial sites of family regulation, such as the child welfare system, that are traditionally neglected Emphasis on multiple modes of legal interpretation (common law, constitutional, statutory) and multiple actors in the legal system (judges, legislators, lawyers, experts, social workers) Practical problems and exercises, often based on actual cases or events, that illuminate the gaps, tensions, and implications of existing doctrine; some of the problems include postscripts explaining how the issue was resolved by a court or legislature An approach that draws on more recent cases and cutting-edge issues and that includes extensive coverage of assisted reproduction (including IVF, surrogacy, and gamete donation), parentage (including intentional parenthood, functional parenthood, and multi-parent arrangements), adoption, child welfare, and family support


Family Law: A Husband's Guide to Matrimonial Disputes • Domestic Violence • Divorce • Maintenance • Multiple Maintenance • Child Custody • Quashing 498A • Transfer of Case • Perjury (with case laws of Hon’ble Supreme Court and High Courts)

Family Law: A Husband's Guide to Matrimonial Disputes • Domestic Violence • Divorce • Maintenance • Multiple Maintenance • Child Custody • Quashing 498A • Transfer of Case • Perjury (with case laws of Hon’ble Supreme Court and High Courts)

Author: Navin Kr Agarwal & Manoj Agrawal

Publisher: Notion Press

Published: 2018-08-31

Total Pages: 348

ISBN-13: 1644291304

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This book contains selected judgements on multifarious matrimonial issues where in the husband has been able to establish the cruelty by the wife resulting in denial of maintenance, able to get the divorce and quash 498A proceedings. This book also compiles judgements wherein the wife has made false allegations and was later exposed; fighting multiple maintenance proceedings; winning transfer petitions and child custody cases, etc. Husbands are not ATM machines. Men are not Born Criminals; Women are not Born Saints.


Examples & Explanations for Family Law

Examples & Explanations for Family Law

Author: Robert E. Oliphant

Publisher: Aspen Publishing

Published: 2018-12-29

Total Pages: 752

ISBN-13: 1543806961

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A favorite classroom prep tool of successful students that is often recommended by professors, the Examples & Explanations (E&E) series provides an alternative perspective to help you understand your casebook and in-class lectures. Each E&E offers hypothetical questions complemented by detailed explanations that allow you to test your knowledge of the topics in your courses and compare your own analysis. Here’s why you need an E&E to help you study throughout the semester: Clear explanations of each class topic, in a conversational, funny style. Features hypotheticals similar to those presented in class, with corresponding analysis so you can use them during the semester to test your understanding, and again at exam time to help you review. It offers coverage that works with ALL the major casebooks, and suits any class on a given topic. The Examples & Explanations series has been ranked the most popular study aid among law students because it is equally as helpful from the first day of class through the final exam.


Women in Law and Lawmaking in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Europe

Women in Law and Lawmaking in Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century Europe

Author: Eva Schandevyl

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2016-02-17

Total Pages: 294

ISBN-13: 1134775067

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Exploring the relationship between gender and law in Europe from the nineteenth century to present, this collection examines the recent feminisation of justice, its historical beginnings and the impact of gendered constructions on jurisprudence. It looks at what influenced the breakthrough of women in the judicial world and what gender factors determine the position of women at the various levels of the legal system. Every chapter in this book addresses these issues either from the point of view of women's legal history, or from that of gendered legal cultures. With contributions from scholars with expertise in the major regions of Europe, this book demonstrates a commitment to a methodological framework that is sensitive to the intersection of gender theory, legal studies and public policy, and that is based on historical methodologies. As such the collection offers a valuable contribution both to women's history research, and the wider development of European legal history.


Obligation and Commitment in Family Law

Obligation and Commitment in Family Law

Author: Gillian Douglas

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2018-04-19

Total Pages: 299

ISBN-13: 178225854X

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A tension lies at the heart of family law. Expressed in the language of rights and duties, it seeks to impose enforceable obligations on individuals linked to each other by ties that are usually regarded as based on love or blood. Taking a contextual approach that draws on history, sociology and social policy as well as law and legal theory, this book examines the concept of obligation as it has been developed in family law and the difficulties the law has had in translating it from a theoretical and ideological concept into the basis of enforceable actions and duties. Increasingly, the idea of commitment has been offered as the key organising principle for the recognition of family relationships, often as a means of rebutting claims that family ties are becoming attenuated, but the meaning and scope of this concept have not been explored. The book traces how the notion of commitment is understood and how far it has come to be used as a rationale for imposing the core legal obligations which underpin care and caring within families.


The Supreme Court in the Intimate Lives of Americans

The Supreme Court in the Intimate Lives of Americans

Author: Howard Ball

Publisher: NYU Press

Published: 2004-06-28

Total Pages: 277

ISBN-13: 0814798632

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Personal rights, such as the right to procreate - or not -and the right to die generate endless debate. This book maps out the legal, political, and ethical issues swirling around personal rights.


A Legal History of Adoption in Ontario, 1921-2015

A Legal History of Adoption in Ontario, 1921-2015

Author: Lori Chambers

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Published: 2016-09-23

Total Pages: 256

ISBN-13: 1487512279

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Lori Chamber's fascinating study explores the legal history of adoption in Ontario since the passage of the first statute in 1921. This volume explores a wide range of themes and issues in the history of adoption including: the reasons for the creation of statutory adoption, the increasing voice of unmarried fathers in newborn adoption, the reasons for movement away from secrecy in adoption, the evolution of step-parent adoption, the adoption of Indigenous children, and the growth of international adoption. Unlike other works on adoption, this book focuses explicitly on statutes, statutory debates, and the interpretation of statutes in court. In doing so, she concludes that adoption is an inadequate response to child welfare and on its own cannot solve problems regarding child neglect and abuse. Rather, Chambers argues that in order to reform the area of adoption we must first acknowledge that it is built upon social inequalities within and between nations.


The Construction of Fatherhood

The Construction of Fatherhood

Author: Alice Margaria

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2019-11-28

Total Pages: 207

ISBN-13: 1108475094

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Explores the ECtHR's understanding of what it means to be a 'father' and the role of doctrines of interpretation.