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Family law

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Family law is an area of the law that deals with family-related issues and domestic relations including, but not limited to:

This list is by no means dispositive of the potential issues that come through the family court system. In many jurisdictions in the United States, the family courts see the most crowded dockets. Litigants representative of all social and economic classes are parties within the system.

For the Conflict of Laws elements dealing with transnational and interstate issues, see marriage (conflict), divorce (conflict) and nullity (conflict).

Contents

[edit] Criticism of the Adversarial System in Family Law

Main article: Fathers' rights movement

Members of the fathers' rights movement criticize the win or lose adversarial system currently used in most Western countries to determine divorce and child custody issues, and define "winning custody" not as the right to parent one's children, but as the power to prevent someone else from parenting his children with the help of the government.[1]

[edit] References

  1. Baskerville, Stephen (2007). Taken Into Custody - The War Against Fathers, Marriage and the Family, Cumberland House. URL accessed 2007-10-22.

[edit] Further reading


[edit] See also

Different jurisdictions

[edit] External links

[edit] International

[edit] USA

[edit] Australia

[edit] England

[edit] Scotland

[edit] Japan

Smallwikipedialogo.png This page uses content from the English-language version of Wikipedia. The original article was at Family law. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Psychology Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.