This article presents a thematic retrospective of the past 40 years of family law in terms of the international landscape in developed countries. It examines three questions: First, whatever happened to marriage? While once marriage was central to family formation, it is no longer. Indeed, heterosexual couples have never been less interested in the idea of marriage. Secondly, whatever happened to divorce? The nature of divorce has fundamentally changed in the last forty years, largely as a consequence of the recognition that while intimate domestic partnerships may come to an end, parenthood is, for the most part, indissoluble. The ties that bind parents together remain important long after the adult relationship has ended. Thirdly, whateve...
"Changes in family structures, demographics, social attitudes and economic policies over the last si...
The family has changed over time, as has the law concerning families and relationships. Thank goodne...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
This collaborative article examines the significant changes to New Zealand family law during the las...
This collaborative article examines the significant changes to New Zealand family law during the las...
In the past fifty years, divorce law has turned upside down. Marriage is not assumed to be a lifelon...
This article provides a survey of one major development in family law in the United States that has ...
This article traces Bill Atkin's contribution to family law in New Zealand, with a particular focus ...
Family law has significantly changed over the last twenty-five years, and certain areas will likely ...
This article sets out some of the recent history of family property reform in New Zealand. The court...
The vast demographic and social changes of the twentieth century have produced a variety of new fami...
Over the past thirty years, lesbians and gay men have increasingly challenged conventional definitio...
The concept of no-fault divorce which became law in Australia in 1975 was part of a revolution in di...
The twenty-first century has seen the dawn of a new era of the family, an era that has its roots in ...
The year 1969 marked the decade\u27s principal accomplishment in family law, the passage of the Fami...
"Changes in family structures, demographics, social attitudes and economic policies over the last si...
The family has changed over time, as has the law concerning families and relationships. Thank goodne...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...
This collaborative article examines the significant changes to New Zealand family law during the las...
This collaborative article examines the significant changes to New Zealand family law during the las...
In the past fifty years, divorce law has turned upside down. Marriage is not assumed to be a lifelon...
This article provides a survey of one major development in family law in the United States that has ...
This article traces Bill Atkin's contribution to family law in New Zealand, with a particular focus ...
Family law has significantly changed over the last twenty-five years, and certain areas will likely ...
This article sets out some of the recent history of family property reform in New Zealand. The court...
The vast demographic and social changes of the twentieth century have produced a variety of new fami...
Over the past thirty years, lesbians and gay men have increasingly challenged conventional definitio...
The concept of no-fault divorce which became law in Australia in 1975 was part of a revolution in di...
The twenty-first century has seen the dawn of a new era of the family, an era that has its roots in ...
The year 1969 marked the decade\u27s principal accomplishment in family law, the passage of the Fami...
"Changes in family structures, demographics, social attitudes and economic policies over the last si...
The family has changed over time, as has the law concerning families and relationships. Thank goodne...
This Article offers a genealogy of domestic relations law (later renamed family law). It comes in tw...