This PDF covers the following topics related to Family Law :
What is Happening in Law Schools Today, Teaching Family Law - A Special Case,
Teaching, Learning and Family Law, Case Studies, Family Law at Leeds, Different
Methods of Assessment, The Experience at Sheffield.
Author(s): Frances Burton, Norma Martin Clement, Kate Standley,
Catherine Williams
This note covers the following
topics: Marriage, Cohabitees, Registered partnership, Parents and children,
Administrators and special representatives, Death, Advice and other assistance.
The aim of writing this book is to spread legal awareness and
accurate information about legal rights to women across class and social hierarchies. Topics covered includes:
Rights and Remedies, Rights within Marriage, Violence Against Women and Children,
Women’s Health and Safety, Women’s Rights under Labor Laws, SC and ST Prevention
of Atrocities Act and National Commission for Women.
This guide is about family law in Texas. Topics covered
includes: The Marriage Relationship, Collaborative Family Law, Child in Relation
to the Family, Juvenile Justice Code, Truancy Court Proceedings, Protective
Orders and Family Violence, The Parent-Child Relationship and the Suit Affecting
the Parent-Child Relationship.
The purpose of this
volume is to furnish to the lawyer, legislator, sociologist and student a
working summary of the marriage and divorce laws of the principal countries of
the world.
'Trivial Complaints' explores the
historical relationship between privacy and domestic violence through an
analysis of litigation and activism. Kirsten S. Rambo begins with an analysis of
courts' and activists' responses to domestic violence during the late nineteenth
century and continues through to the late twentieth century, when the modern
battered women's movement emerged on the heels of the battle to secure abortion
rights. Rambo explores the seemingly contradictory yet often complementary ways
in which the discourse of privacy has been shaped by both movements seeking
justice for women. She further examines concepts of privacy as applied to
same-sex relationships and domestic violence, and ultimately considers
alternative models of privacy that are egalitarian and rooted in empowerment.