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Things to Know About Family Law Family law is an area of the law that deals with family-related issues and domestic relations which include:

marriage, civil ceremonies, and domestic relationships; issues arising in the course of marriage, like spousal abuse, legitimacy, adoption, surrogacy, child abuse, and child abduction legal ways to end a relationship and ancillary items that includes divorce, annulment, property settlements, alimony, and parental responsibleness orders (in America, child custody and visitation rights, who will support the child and alimony awards).

Paternity fraud and testing Juvenile adjudication

This list is rarely dispositive of the possible problems that come through the family court system. In severaljurisdictions in the states, the family courts understand the most packed dockets. Litigants representative of all social and economic classes are parties within the system.

For the conflict of laws factors concerning transnational and interstate problems, discuss with marriage (conflict), divorce (conflict) and nullity (conflict).

Criticism of Family Law

Supporters of Alimony reform also critique the Family Law system. They reason that current system pits divorcing couples against each other over child support and alimony, developing a hostile environment for the family and necessitating large payments to divorce lawyers.

Check also

Alimony Paternity fraud Merger doctrine (family law) monitored visitation

More precised jurisdictions

Algerian Family Code Family Court of Australia Australian family law Family Law Act (Alberta, Canada) Family law system in England and Wales The Children Act 1989 Sir Morris Finer - Report on One Parent Families Malian Family Code Mudawana (The Moroccan Family Code).

Civil Code of the Philippines

References

-Benedict, Elizabeth (17 November 2011). "Divorce Arianna Style". The Huffington Post.

-Matlack, Tom (17 November 2011). "Divorce Reform In Massachusetts: David vs. Goliath". The Huffington Post.

More reading Testimony of Barbara DaFoe Whitehead, Ph.D, Co-Director, National Marriage Project Rutgers University, before US Senate Subcommitee Wallerstein, Judith, Ph.D., "The Unexpected Legacy of Divorce", an analysis of the long-term effect of divorce on children; NPR interview (2000) tucson divorce lawyers

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