Over time, provincial legislation in Canada modified the common law position on the “illegitimacy” of children born outside marriage. They first imposed liability on parents for the support of illegitimate children. Second, they provided for the legitimation of children whose parents subsequently married. Finally, they abolished the concept of illegitimacy. This article describes and compares the legislative histories in four Canadian provinces, which all took somewhat different approaches: British Columbia (BC), Nova Scotia, Ontario, and Saskatchewan. Part II traces the complex history of the legislation dealing with the financial support of illegitimate children; Part III addresses the legislation dealing with legitimation; and Part IV re...
Lesbian couples and single women are choosing to become parents, typically via some form of assisted...
Many historians have studied illegitimacy as a national economic and social problem. Today, in the e...
This study is concerned with the problem of obtaining maintenance payments from putative fathers for...
Over time, provincial legislation in Canada modified the common law position on the “illegitimacy” o...
After-born children are anachronistic aberrations. Defying any commonsense notion of procreation, an...
This article examines legal discourses on precarious status children in Canada over the last decade....
This article examines legal discourses on precarious status children in Canada over the last decade....
This article describes Quebec’s filiation regime and explains some of the Roy Report’s recommendatio...
This article reviews the jurisprudence that emerged during the first year of the new family law stat...
This article contends that parental undocumented status can and should be recognized as an analogous...
This thesis contributes to scholarly debates over the enactment and effect of age, gender, and kin-b...
The rapid and continued advancements in assisted reproductive technology now make it possible for ch...
In 2019 a Superior Court in Nova Scotia excluded adult independent children as “Dependants” under No...
Central to the relationship between Canada and Aboriginal children is transgression: the systematic ...
It is accepted that Canada’s Constitution is almost impossible to amend, and that this amendment rig...
Lesbian couples and single women are choosing to become parents, typically via some form of assisted...
Many historians have studied illegitimacy as a national economic and social problem. Today, in the e...
This study is concerned with the problem of obtaining maintenance payments from putative fathers for...
Over time, provincial legislation in Canada modified the common law position on the “illegitimacy” o...
After-born children are anachronistic aberrations. Defying any commonsense notion of procreation, an...
This article examines legal discourses on precarious status children in Canada over the last decade....
This article examines legal discourses on precarious status children in Canada over the last decade....
This article describes Quebec’s filiation regime and explains some of the Roy Report’s recommendatio...
This article reviews the jurisprudence that emerged during the first year of the new family law stat...
This article contends that parental undocumented status can and should be recognized as an analogous...
This thesis contributes to scholarly debates over the enactment and effect of age, gender, and kin-b...
The rapid and continued advancements in assisted reproductive technology now make it possible for ch...
In 2019 a Superior Court in Nova Scotia excluded adult independent children as “Dependants” under No...
Central to the relationship between Canada and Aboriginal children is transgression: the systematic ...
It is accepted that Canada’s Constitution is almost impossible to amend, and that this amendment rig...
Lesbian couples and single women are choosing to become parents, typically via some form of assisted...
Many historians have studied illegitimacy as a national economic and social problem. Today, in the e...
This study is concerned with the problem of obtaining maintenance payments from putative fathers for...