The purpose of this article is to examine the notion of legal paternal responsibility from the perspective of psychoanalytic theory. In psychoanalysis, a privileged place is accorded to the father, both in the emergence of the subject and in the symbolic order itself. This privileged position, however, flows not from the person of the father but from the performance of what Lacan terms the "paternal function". Taking up this idea, the article considers the recommendations relating to legal paternity contained in the recent New Zealand Law Commission Report New Issues in Legal Parenthood. In particular, the article challenges the proposition that legal paternity should automatically flow from genetic fathering. The article argues tha...
This article examines the recent history and current status of the marital presumption of paternity....
In Part I of this article, Dalton briefly reviews the way legal scholars commonly define sex-based d...
This commentary examines the language used by Baker J in Re G; Re Z (Children: Sperm Donors: Leave ...
In psychoanalysis, fathering has not received much analytical attention and only little is known a...
Recent legal developments in Canada have produced contradictory trends in relation to defining paren...
Most theories of parentage fail to explain the genesis of the right to parent—for example, why does ...
Despite the increased recognition afforded to biological fathers as legal parents, the Children's Ac...
This marital presumption permitted courts to assume a set of biological facts in the name of prese...
Most contemporary family law scholarship assumes that propriety of a DNA default for establishing pa...
As Justice Brennan observed in Michael H. v. Gerald D. so many years ago, we must “identify the poin...
This Article makes the case against a nascent consensus among feminist and other progressive scholar...
In this thesis I explore, both philosophically and empirically, the moral significance of genetic re...
Biology makes a mother, but it does not make a father. While a mother is a legal parent by reason of...
With the use of Assisted Reproductive Technologies, the number of participants in the procreative pr...
Despite the increased recognition afforded to biological fathers as legal parents, the Children's A...
This article examines the recent history and current status of the marital presumption of paternity....
In Part I of this article, Dalton briefly reviews the way legal scholars commonly define sex-based d...
This commentary examines the language used by Baker J in Re G; Re Z (Children: Sperm Donors: Leave ...
In psychoanalysis, fathering has not received much analytical attention and only little is known a...
Recent legal developments in Canada have produced contradictory trends in relation to defining paren...
Most theories of parentage fail to explain the genesis of the right to parent—for example, why does ...
Despite the increased recognition afforded to biological fathers as legal parents, the Children's Ac...
This marital presumption permitted courts to assume a set of biological facts in the name of prese...
Most contemporary family law scholarship assumes that propriety of a DNA default for establishing pa...
As Justice Brennan observed in Michael H. v. Gerald D. so many years ago, we must “identify the poin...
This Article makes the case against a nascent consensus among feminist and other progressive scholar...
In this thesis I explore, both philosophically and empirically, the moral significance of genetic re...
Biology makes a mother, but it does not make a father. While a mother is a legal parent by reason of...
With the use of Assisted Reproductive Technologies, the number of participants in the procreative pr...
Despite the increased recognition afforded to biological fathers as legal parents, the Children's A...
This article examines the recent history and current status of the marital presumption of paternity....
In Part I of this article, Dalton briefly reviews the way legal scholars commonly define sex-based d...
This commentary examines the language used by Baker J in Re G; Re Z (Children: Sperm Donors: Leave ...