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Full-Text Articles in Family Law
The Immigrant "Other": Racialized Identity And The Devaluation Of Immigrant Family Relations, Anita Maddali
The Immigrant "Other": Racialized Identity And The Devaluation Of Immigrant Family Relations, Anita Maddali
Indiana Law Journal
This Article explores how current terminations of undocumented immigrants’ parental rights are reminiscent of historical practices that removed early immigrant and Native American children from their parents in an attempt to cultivate an Anglo-American national identity. Today, children are separated from their families when courts terminate the rights of parents who have been, or who face, deportation. Often, biases toward undocumented parents affect determinations concerning parental fitness in a manner that, while different, reaps the same results as the removal of children from their families over a century ago. This Article examines cases in which courts terminated the parental rights …
Fundamental Versus Deferential: Appellate Review Of Terminations Of Parental Rights, Karen A. Wyle
Fundamental Versus Deferential: Appellate Review Of Terminations Of Parental Rights, Karen A. Wyle
Indiana Law Journal
Any attorney who handles or follows cases involving termination of parental rights will have often read, “This court has long had a highly deferential standard of review in cases concerning the termination of parental rights.” This article addresses several questions that arise from that familiar language:
- Does the Indiana Court of Appeals in fact have a tradition or practice of highly deferential review of termination orders?
- Is this deference greater than the court accords to trial court decisions in other family law matters or in non-family civil appeals?
- If so, on what legal analysis is this special deference based?
- Is …