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Full-Text Articles in Law

Bringing Specificity To Child Custody Provisions In California, Shawn Mccall Apr 2019

Bringing Specificity To Child Custody Provisions In California, Shawn Mccall

Golden Gate University Law Review

This Comment evaluates the empirical evidence from social science studies to demonstrate that there is currently a sturdy body of social science research to justify using tangible evidence to define terms in the California Family Code, the California Family Courts, and beyond. Because the standard for custody determinations in California is the “best interest of the child” per the state’s legislation, social science research provides a vehicle that can define the “best interest of the child standard.” This Comment argues that this can be done empirically by calculating the minimum amount of time a child—in the aggregate— needs with each …


Children’S Voices In Family Law Conflicts, Benedetta Faedi Duramy, Tali Gal Jul 2015

Children’S Voices In Family Law Conflicts, Benedetta Faedi Duramy, Tali Gal

Publications

Children are commonly recognized as separate human beings with individual views and wishes worthy of consideration. Their ability to freely express these views and wishes constitutes the concept of child participation, defined by Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child as the right of children capable of forming their own views to be able to express themselves freely in all matters affecting their lives. Children should particularly be provided with the opportunity to be heard in any judicial and administrative proceedings pertaining to them, either directly or through appropriate representatives, and with necessary precautions …


Must Judges Follow Children’S Wishes Over Their Custody?, Benedetta Faedi Duramy Jun 2015

Must Judges Follow Children’S Wishes Over Their Custody?, Benedetta Faedi Duramy

Publications

Across countries and jurisdictions, allowing children to voice their preferences in family disputes is beneficial for all parties involved. Judges find it useful to complement and corroborate facts and information of a case, parents learn how their children are coping with the current situation, and, finally, children end up being more satisfied with the process and adjusting better to the outcome. Giving children a say over their custody empowers them, fosters their sense of control, and contributes to their best interest. Those who are not invited to express their views, instead, become disappointed, frustrated and resentful.


Home State, Cross-Border Custody, And Habitual Residence Jurisdiction: Time For A Temporal Standard In International Family Law, Todd Heine Sep 2011

Home State, Cross-Border Custody, And Habitual Residence Jurisdiction: Time For A Temporal Standard In International Family Law, Todd Heine

Annual Survey of International & Comparative Law

This article addresses three jurisdictional standards that arise in every cross-border child custody dispute between European Union Member States and the United States: home state, cross-border, and habitual residence jurisdiction. These jurisdictional standards face uncertainty in many cases.

First, this article provides a history of family law jurisdiction in the United States and thoroughly reviews home state jurisdiction in United States domestic law. While domestic family lawyers know this standard, the standard’s rigidity and fragmented application among the states baffle many foreign family lawyers.

Second, this article offers an overview of the remarkable emergence of family law in European Union …


California's Move-Away Law: Are Children Being Hurt By Judicial Presumptions That Sweep Too Broadly?, Jennifer Gould Sep 2010

California's Move-Away Law: Are Children Being Hurt By Judicial Presumptions That Sweep Too Broadly?, Jennifer Gould

Golden Gate University Law Review

This Comment will summarize the various types of custody situations and their relevance in deciding move-away cases. Next, this Comment will examine In re Marriage of Burgess, a landmark California Supreme Court move-away case, and discuss its impact on family law courts, families, and attorneys involved with move-away cases. Included is an examination of certain factors that the Burgess court did not fully address in its analysis. Finally, drawing upon public policy, social science research, legal commentary, and other jurisdictions' moveaway laws, this Comment will propose a more comprehensive approach to deciding move-away cases. This approach limits the application of …


Redefining Parenthood: Child Custody And Visitation When Nontraditional Families Dissolve, Kristine L. Burks Sep 2010

Redefining Parenthood: Child Custody And Visitation When Nontraditional Families Dissolve, Kristine L. Burks

Golden Gate University Law Review

This article offers a method of providing custody and visitation rights to individuals formerly involved in nontraditional relationships who function as children's parents but who lack the legal status of parent. The article considers a broad range of nontraditional families, including stepparents, same-sex partners, and unmarried heterosexuals. The article begins with a summary of California statutory law. The author examines how "parent" is defined and the limitations imposed on those falling outside that definition when they seek to assert rights to child custody and visitation. Next, the article focuses on three types of nontraditional relationships to illustrate how California courts …


Frozen Embryos: New Technology Meets Family Law, Natalie K. Young Sep 2010

Frozen Embryos: New Technology Meets Family Law, Natalie K. Young

Golden Gate University Law Review

This article addresses the various reasons and legal arguments for treating embryos as life, or in the alternative as property. In particular, this article analyzes the legal status of frozen embryos in a marital dissolution proceeding from a custodial point of view and a marital property point of view. Part I sets forth a broad policy perspective on the doctrinal choices that must be made in determining the legal status of the embryo. Part II first explores the possibility of classifying frozen embryos as human life and then presents a legal analysis, derived from the general principles of family law, …


Child Sexual Abuse In Custody And Visitation Disputes: Problems, Progress, And Prospects, Susan Romer Sep 2010

Child Sexual Abuse In Custody And Visitation Disputes: Problems, Progress, And Prospects, Susan Romer

Golden Gate University Law Review

This Comment will focus on cases involving allegations of child sexual abuse made during divorce proceedings or during post-judgment custody and visitation disputes. California law is the primary focus. New York cases, statutes and procedures are compared and contrasted. The Comment first discusses studies of the veracity of allegations of sexual abuse arising in custody and visitation cases. Secondly, it addresses the methods used in the investigation and assessment of child sexual abuse charges. Finally, it explores which court is best able to decide these cases.


The Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act: How Can Non-Marital Children Be Protected?, Nancy S. Erickson Sep 2010

The Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act: How Can Non-Marital Children Be Protected?, Nancy S. Erickson

Golden Gate University Law Review

Parental kidnapping has been called "one of the most subtle and brutal forms of child abuse." In response to the seriousness of the problem of childsnatching and its increasing incidence in this country, steps have been taken on both state and federal levels. The UCCJA was approved by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws and by the American Bar Association in 1968. By 1984 it had been enacted in all states and the Virgin Islands. Virtually all states have also enacted criminal parental kidnapping statutes. In 1980, Congress passed the Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act (PKPA), which not …


The Nonmarital Sexual Conduct Of Custodial Mothers: A Study Of California's Precarious Parental Rights, Barbara Child Sep 2010

The Nonmarital Sexual Conduct Of Custodial Mothers: A Study Of California's Precarious Parental Rights, Barbara Child

Golden Gate University Law Review

Mothers of minor children engage in sexual conduct with men to whom they are not married. That is no longer a shocking truth. Nonetheless, those mothers continue to live with a Damocles sword hanging over their heads. Their sexual conduct can still cause them to lose their children, even in these supposedly liberated times in the state of California. This Article surveys the cases in which the most commonly used ambiguous statutes together with secure judicial discretion have been brought to bear on custodial mothers who either by choice or by economic necessity do not live conventional middleclass lives. The …


The Lesbian Family: Rights In Conflict Under The California Uniform Parentage Act, Stuart A. Sutton Aug 2010

The Lesbian Family: Rights In Conflict Under The California Uniform Parentage Act, Stuart A. Sutton

Golden Gate University Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Lesbian Mother: Her Right To Child Custody, Benna F. Armanno Aug 2010

The Lesbian Mother: Her Right To Child Custody, Benna F. Armanno

Golden Gate University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Summary Report On Hearing On Child Custody, Senate Select Committee On Women In The Workforce Nov 1992

Summary Report On Hearing On Child Custody, Senate Select Committee On Women In The Workforce

California Senate

No abstract provided.