Lesbian and gay activists favouring equal legal recognition of sam-sex relationships can point to a host of successes in a number of countries over the ast decade. Between 2004 and 2006 New Zealand passed its Civil Union Act, Canada passed the Civil Marriage Act, the UK pass the Civil Parnership Act and South Africa passed its Civil Union Act. Immigration law and policy applying to same-sex couples has also been liberalized in all of these countries in recent years
This edited collection provides a forum for rigorous analysis of the necessity for both legal and so...
The process of policy diffusion is gaining increasing attention among social scientists. Following w...
Perhaps nowhere in family law is this evolution more dramatic than in the burgeoning recognition of ...
More than thirty jurisdictions across the (Western) world have, since Demark was the first to do so ...
This is chapter 6 of a report that offers a comparative analysis of legal and other data concernin...
The tide in favour of legal equality for gay and lesbian individuals and couples continues to roll f...
Statistics NZ is responsible for releasing marriage and civil union registration data. Data refers t...
The implementation of laws recognizing same-sex unions (SSU) by a majority of western democracies ov...
LAW- AND POLICY-MAKERS in New Zealand have taken what might be seen, from a conservative/liberal div...
Following the adoption of the Civil Union Act 17 of 2006 (Civil Union Act) on 1 December 2006, South...
On December 1, 2005, the Constitutional Court of South Africa set that nation on course to join a sm...
In recent decades Australia has seen significant advances in relation to the recognition of LGBTI hu...
It sometimes happens that in a single year a series of law reform events, legislative and judicial, ...
An examination of the circumstances in which foreign same-sex relationships will be recognised by ap...
The traditional problem of 'limping relationships' in private international law is emerging more and...
This edited collection provides a forum for rigorous analysis of the necessity for both legal and so...
The process of policy diffusion is gaining increasing attention among social scientists. Following w...
Perhaps nowhere in family law is this evolution more dramatic than in the burgeoning recognition of ...
More than thirty jurisdictions across the (Western) world have, since Demark was the first to do so ...
This is chapter 6 of a report that offers a comparative analysis of legal and other data concernin...
The tide in favour of legal equality for gay and lesbian individuals and couples continues to roll f...
Statistics NZ is responsible for releasing marriage and civil union registration data. Data refers t...
The implementation of laws recognizing same-sex unions (SSU) by a majority of western democracies ov...
LAW- AND POLICY-MAKERS in New Zealand have taken what might be seen, from a conservative/liberal div...
Following the adoption of the Civil Union Act 17 of 2006 (Civil Union Act) on 1 December 2006, South...
On December 1, 2005, the Constitutional Court of South Africa set that nation on course to join a sm...
In recent decades Australia has seen significant advances in relation to the recognition of LGBTI hu...
It sometimes happens that in a single year a series of law reform events, legislative and judicial, ...
An examination of the circumstances in which foreign same-sex relationships will be recognised by ap...
The traditional problem of 'limping relationships' in private international law is emerging more and...
This edited collection provides a forum for rigorous analysis of the necessity for both legal and so...
The process of policy diffusion is gaining increasing attention among social scientists. Following w...
Perhaps nowhere in family law is this evolution more dramatic than in the burgeoning recognition of ...