Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- American Law Institute (ALI) (1)
- Cardozo Law Review (1)
- Child protection (1)
- Child welfare (1)
- Children's rights (1)
-
- Civil marriage (1)
- Columbia Law Review (1)
- Contract law (1)
- Domestic partnership (1)
- Family group conferencing (1)
- Informal union (1)
- Juvenile law (1)
- Law reform (1)
- Legal protection (1)
- Liberal democracy (1)
- Marriage deregulation (1)
- Marriage law (1)
- Marriage obligation (1)
- Marvin v. Marvin (1)
- Opposite-sex couple (1)
- Parents and children (1)
- Same-sex couple (1)
- Same-sex relationship (1)
- UCLA Law Review (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network
Rights Myopia In Child Welfare, Clare Huntington
Rights Myopia In Child Welfare, Clare Huntington
Faculty Scholarship
For decades, legal scholars have debated the proper balance of parents' rights and children's rights in the child welfare system. This Article argues that the debate mistakenly privileges rights. Neither parents' rights nor children's rights serve families well because, as implemented, a solely rights-based model of child welfare does not protect the interests of parents or children. Additionally, even if well-implemented, the model still would not serve parents or children because it obscures the important role of poverty in child abuse and neglect and fosters conflict, rather than collaboration, between the state and families. In lieu of a solely rights-based …
A Case For Civil Marriage, Carol Sanger
A Case For Civil Marriage, Carol Sanger
Faculty Scholarship
There has been a frenzy of legislative activity aimed at nailing down the legal definition of marriage to make sure that there will be no more nonsense about same-sex monograms or same-sex marriage applications. In an effort to slow down the frenzy, and to encourage those within the academy to think harder about the on-going problem of what to do about marriage, Professor Edward Stein has posed a straightforward question: Should civil marriage simply be abolished? In this mini-symposium, Professors Edward Zelinsky and Daniel Crane have provided two answers to his question: yes and yes.
Although I am a Contract …
Domestic Partnerships, Implied Contracts, And Law Reform, Elizabeth S. Scott
Domestic Partnerships, Implied Contracts, And Law Reform, Elizabeth S. Scott
Faculty Scholarship
The domestic partnership chapter of the Principles is the shortest chapter, but, as the contributions to this volume suggest, among the most interesting to many people. The legal regulation of informal intimate unions generally and particularly the Principles' approach of creating a status that carries the legal rights and obligations of marriage between cohabiting parties have generated considerable debate. In some quarters, the domestic partnership provisions are admired as an effective mechanism to protect dependent partners in marriage-like unions who otherwise may be unable to establish claims to property and support when their relationships end. Others praise the Principles for …
Infant Safe Haven Laws: Legislating In The Culture Of Life, Carol Sanger
Infant Safe Haven Laws: Legislating In The Culture Of Life, Carol Sanger
Faculty Scholarship
This Article analyzes the politics, implementation, and influence of Infant Safe Haven laws. These laws, enacted across the states in the early 2000s in response to much-publicized discoveries of dead and abandoned infants, provide for the legal abandonment of newborns. They offer new mothers immunity and anonymity in exchange for leaving their babies at designated Safe Havens. Yet despite widespread enactment, the laws have had relatively little impact on the phenomenon of infant abandonment. This Article explains why this is so, focusing particularly on a disconnect between the legislative scheme and the characteristics of neonaticidal mothers that makes the use …