Commonly known as the domestic relations exception, the United States Supreme Court\u27s broad disclaimer of federal power over family law matters symbolizes the inherent division of power fundamental to a dual sovereignty. Although the Court announced the disclaimer only in dicta, and no authoritative analysis of its validity exists, federal courts have adamantly declared that the domestic relations exception divests them of jurisdiction over divorce, alimony, and child custody. Within the last twenty years, however, a growing number of federal courts have questioned the validity and contours of the domestic relations exception. This questioning indicates a basic misunderstanding of the role of federal courts in domestic relations law. A r...
The following article presents a survey of domestic relations law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. D...
Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 1 N. Y. 2d 342, 135 N. E. 2d 553 (1956), cert. granted, 352 U. S. 820 (195...
This article explores the discrepancy in the law of federal jurisdiction as it has developed under t...
The federal courts have long viewed domestic relations litigation as beyond their competence, even t...
Scholars and jurists have long debated the origins and current scope of the so-called domestic relat...
This Article examines the classic issue of the allocation of jurisdiction between the state and fede...
This Comment offers a new approach to the domestic relations exception. It proposes a three-step ana...
There has long been conflict over the relationship between the states and the federal system vis-i-v...
By examining the history of the federal government\u27s role in the regulation of the family, this a...
American divorce law was transformed by the Supreme Court in a series of decisions beginning with Wi...
The principle of federalism in family law is long-established and deeply embedded in the United St...
Landes v. Landes, 1 N. Y. 2d 358, 135 N. E. 2d 562 (1956), appeal docketed, 25 U. S. L. WEEK 3155, (...
A great deal has been said, but very little has been authoritatively written upon the subject of Dom...
One of the great complications of the current marriage debates is the way that federalism and confli...
While Article VI of the US Constitution establishes treaties as supreme federal law, scholars and la...
The following article presents a survey of domestic relations law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. D...
Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 1 N. Y. 2d 342, 135 N. E. 2d 553 (1956), cert. granted, 352 U. S. 820 (195...
This article explores the discrepancy in the law of federal jurisdiction as it has developed under t...
The federal courts have long viewed domestic relations litigation as beyond their competence, even t...
Scholars and jurists have long debated the origins and current scope of the so-called domestic relat...
This Article examines the classic issue of the allocation of jurisdiction between the state and fede...
This Comment offers a new approach to the domestic relations exception. It proposes a three-step ana...
There has long been conflict over the relationship between the states and the federal system vis-i-v...
By examining the history of the federal government\u27s role in the regulation of the family, this a...
American divorce law was transformed by the Supreme Court in a series of decisions beginning with Wi...
The principle of federalism in family law is long-established and deeply embedded in the United St...
Landes v. Landes, 1 N. Y. 2d 358, 135 N. E. 2d 562 (1956), appeal docketed, 25 U. S. L. WEEK 3155, (...
A great deal has been said, but very little has been authoritatively written upon the subject of Dom...
One of the great complications of the current marriage debates is the way that federalism and confli...
While Article VI of the US Constitution establishes treaties as supreme federal law, scholars and la...
The following article presents a survey of domestic relations law in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. D...
Vanderbilt v. Vanderbilt, 1 N. Y. 2d 342, 135 N. E. 2d 553 (1956), cert. granted, 352 U. S. 820 (195...
This article explores the discrepancy in the law of federal jurisdiction as it has developed under t...