This chapter examines how the vision of the natural family articulated by several prominent conservativereligious organizations in the United States shapes their opposition to certain human rights instruments. TheUnited Nations\u27 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child seems to reflect an advance in internationalhuman rights formulations and to have generated a high degree of formal commitment by governments, as evidenced by its quick and virtually universal ratification. However, the United States stands nearly alone innot having ratified the Convention, and the religious groups examined in this chapter strenuously urge that it should not do so, lest it undermine the natural family, motherhood, and parental and national sovereignty. O...
In discussing the legal system\u27s response to alternative families seeking an extension of traditi...
This article examines the right to respect for family life in international law, focusing on its und...
For almost a century, the Supreme Court has recognized the substantive due process right of individu...
This chapter examines how the vision of the natural family articulated by several prominent conserva...
This Article argues that challenges made to family law structures have provoked a significant reacti...
Until recent years, authorities in the United States gave little serious consideration to the marria...
This article examines the evolving way the ‘family’ and ‘family life’ have been understood in intern...
This article traces the religious roots of American family law and the way that those roots still im...
This Article argues that the Inter-American System of Human Rights has contributed to a family syste...
The United States is the only nation, besides Somalia, not to ratify the 1989 United Nations Convent...
The family plays a starring role in American law. Families, the law tells us, are special. They meri...
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) (UN 1947:34) declares in Article 16(3) that “the fa...
This introduction focuses on religious beliefs in American families.https://digitalcommons.chapman.e...
Objectives: International law contains several provisions on the protection of family and marriage r...
The proponents of this thesis examined Article 167 of the Family Code to identify whether it deprive...
In discussing the legal system\u27s response to alternative families seeking an extension of traditi...
This article examines the right to respect for family life in international law, focusing on its und...
For almost a century, the Supreme Court has recognized the substantive due process right of individu...
This chapter examines how the vision of the natural family articulated by several prominent conserva...
This Article argues that challenges made to family law structures have provoked a significant reacti...
Until recent years, authorities in the United States gave little serious consideration to the marria...
This article examines the evolving way the ‘family’ and ‘family life’ have been understood in intern...
This article traces the religious roots of American family law and the way that those roots still im...
This Article argues that the Inter-American System of Human Rights has contributed to a family syste...
The United States is the only nation, besides Somalia, not to ratify the 1989 United Nations Convent...
The family plays a starring role in American law. Families, the law tells us, are special. They meri...
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) (UN 1947:34) declares in Article 16(3) that “the fa...
This introduction focuses on religious beliefs in American families.https://digitalcommons.chapman.e...
Objectives: International law contains several provisions on the protection of family and marriage r...
The proponents of this thesis examined Article 167 of the Family Code to identify whether it deprive...
In discussing the legal system\u27s response to alternative families seeking an extension of traditi...
This article examines the right to respect for family life in international law, focusing on its und...
For almost a century, the Supreme Court has recognized the substantive due process right of individu...