Parenthood is a status comprising exclusivity relating to the rights and responsibilities concerning the child. The rights and obligations imbued in the parental status are evident first and foremost during the child’s minority. Nonetheless, the status has legal meaning and implications that extend beyond the child’s minority and carry on throughout adulthood. By defining parenthood and assigning parental status, the law establishes legal as well as social responsibility towards the child and a bond for life. This article questions the eternal aspect of parenthood and aspires to initiate discussion pertaining to the social and legal conventions that pose parenthood as a binding legal relation and responsibility for life. Today, the law perm...
Modern technology has wreaked havoc on conventional and legal notions of parenthood For example, th...
This article addresses the constitutionality of those statutes known as parental support laws or ...
Equitable parenthood doctrines generally provide rights relating to visitation or custody to an indi...
Parenthood is a status comprising exclusivity relating to the rights and responsibilities concerning...
This article explores the significance of parental status in the determination of custody and the qu...
This article addresses the role of the genetic tie in the parent-child relationship through three le...
The article analyzes the Supreme Court’s decision in M.L.B. v. S.L.J., 519 U.S. 102 (1996), which he...
In this symposium contribution for The Law of Parents and Parenting, we argue that parental rights a...
Establishing legal parentage, once a relatively straightforward matter of marriage and biology, has ...
One might think that parental obligation to children ends with the end of childhood. I argue that if...
Parental rights are—and should remain—the backbone of family law. State deference to parents is warr...
This analysis of the American Law Institute\u27s Principles of Family Law, Chapter 3, examines how t...
The act of terminating parental rights-the total and permanent severance of the parent-child relatio...
From the moment a child is born, she is a juridical person endowed with constitutional rights. A chi...
Building upon three main points developed by Patrick Parkinson in Family Law and the Indissolubility...
Modern technology has wreaked havoc on conventional and legal notions of parenthood For example, th...
This article addresses the constitutionality of those statutes known as parental support laws or ...
Equitable parenthood doctrines generally provide rights relating to visitation or custody to an indi...
Parenthood is a status comprising exclusivity relating to the rights and responsibilities concerning...
This article explores the significance of parental status in the determination of custody and the qu...
This article addresses the role of the genetic tie in the parent-child relationship through three le...
The article analyzes the Supreme Court’s decision in M.L.B. v. S.L.J., 519 U.S. 102 (1996), which he...
In this symposium contribution for The Law of Parents and Parenting, we argue that parental rights a...
Establishing legal parentage, once a relatively straightforward matter of marriage and biology, has ...
One might think that parental obligation to children ends with the end of childhood. I argue that if...
Parental rights are—and should remain—the backbone of family law. State deference to parents is warr...
This analysis of the American Law Institute\u27s Principles of Family Law, Chapter 3, examines how t...
The act of terminating parental rights-the total and permanent severance of the parent-child relatio...
From the moment a child is born, she is a juridical person endowed with constitutional rights. A chi...
Building upon three main points developed by Patrick Parkinson in Family Law and the Indissolubility...
Modern technology has wreaked havoc on conventional and legal notions of parenthood For example, th...
This article addresses the constitutionality of those statutes known as parental support laws or ...
Equitable parenthood doctrines generally provide rights relating to visitation or custody to an indi...