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2008

Domestic Relations

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Institution
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Full-Text Articles in Law

Families Redefined: Kinship Groups That Deserve Benefits, Jane E. Cross, Charlene Smith, Nan Palmer Nov 2008

Families Redefined: Kinship Groups That Deserve Benefits, Jane E. Cross, Charlene Smith, Nan Palmer

Jane E Cross

In Families Redefined: Kinship Groups that Deserve Benefits, the authors examine 1) the nature of kinship families, 2) the benefits accorded to married couples, 3) kinship families that lack protection and benefits, 4) the impact of denying kinship protection and benefits, 5) the use of contract law in kinship relationship and 6) using legislation to benefit kinship relationships.

This exploration of expanding family law protections to kinship groups addresses a series of interrelated topics. The first two sections of the article explore the characteristics and creation of kinship families in different societies. The third section addresses the legal benefits provided …


The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier Nov 2008

The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier

Bridget M Fuselier

“The Trouble With Putting All of Your Eggs in One Basket:

Using a Property Rights Model to Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos”

Bridget M. Fuselier

ABSTRACT

This article covers a very current and relevant topic in today’s legal environment. Previous articles have merely discussed competing models or coverage of the disputes in the case law. My article embarks upon a comprehensive look at the specific problem presented and then goes on to offer a specific model with proposed legislation to address these disputes in a fundamentally more efficient manner.

As evidenced by current efforts in a number of states, the …


An Inconvenient Truth: Recognizing Andrea Yates Was A Victim Of Spousal Abuse: She Killed Her Children To Save Her Life, Shelby A.D. Moore Oct 2008

An Inconvenient Truth: Recognizing Andrea Yates Was A Victim Of Spousal Abuse: She Killed Her Children To Save Her Life, Shelby A.D. Moore

Shelby A.D. Moore

The definition of domestic violence is broad and includes physical as well as psychological and sexual abuse. However, the legal system gives considerably less attention to these latter forms of abuse. One reason for the relative neglect in the area is the assumption that physical abuse causes more harm than do psychological and sexual abuse. In reality these forms of abuse may have a far greater impact on their victims. Apart from physical abuse, greater attention must be given to those who suffer on-going psychological and sexual abuse at the hand of a spouse or intimate partner. We must consider …


Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg Sep 2008

Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg

Ryan M. Riegg

This article examines the legal and economic incentives created by the Islamic Marriage and Divorce System (“IMDS”) to develop an empirical model regarding the relative prevalence and severity of clitoridectomy practices in different Muslim societies and considers how those practices may be eliminated from an economic perspective.
Part I of the article establishes the economic link between the IMDS and clitoridectomy and compares the IMDS and the American Marriage & Divorce System (“AMDS”) in terms of their relative efficiency. Part II operationalizes and refines the basic theory outlined in Part I by creating a falsifiable model regarding the relative prevalence …


Interstate Intercourse: How Modern Assisted Reproductive Technologies Challenge The Traditional Realm Of Conflicts Of Law, Sonia B. Green Sep 2008

Interstate Intercourse: How Modern Assisted Reproductive Technologies Challenge The Traditional Realm Of Conflicts Of Law, Sonia B. Green

Sonia Bychkov Green

New technologies have always posed challenges to established legal norms. Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) in particular pose legal and ethical challenges to the law, and create never before seen legal problems. Although the ABA House of Representatives recently approved the Model Act Governing Assisted Reproductive Technology, differences in laws and rules will continue to exist. The legal issued involved are wide-ranging, including: liability issues arising from the failure of ART technology, parentage issues, disposition of embryos, and many others. As ART becomes more widely used, it is also used more in an interstate and international context. Thus, when a dispute …


Prenatal Drug Exposure: The Impetus For Overreaction By The Legal Community Or A Serious Problem Needing A Serious Solution, Janet W. Steverson Sep 2008

Prenatal Drug Exposure: The Impetus For Overreaction By The Legal Community Or A Serious Problem Needing A Serious Solution, Janet W. Steverson

Janet W. Steverson

In 1994 this author argued for the adoption of a legislative scheme that addressed the problems of children exposed prenatally to drugs and alcohol. Under that scheme fetal abuse became a crime. However, the sentence for the crime was probation with drug treatment and no-pregnancy conditions, rather than incarceration. Although no state has enacted the proposed legislative scheme in total, a number of states have enacted bits and pieces of the scheme. No state has, however, made fetal abuse a crime.

In addition to the legislation that has been enacted since 1994, a number of other changes have occurred that …


Redefining Harm, Reimagining Remedies And Reclaiming Domestic Violence Law, Margaret Johnson Aug 2008

Redefining Harm, Reimagining Remedies And Reclaiming Domestic Violence Law, Margaret Johnson

Margaret E Johnson

Women subjected to domestic violence are disserved by the civil domestic violence laws that should effectively address and redress their harms. The Civil Protective Order [CPO] laws should remedy all domestic abuse and not solely physical violence or criminal acts. All forms of abuse, including psychological, emotional, economic and physical abuse, cause severe emotional distress, physical harm, isolation, sustained fear, intimidation, poverty, degradation, humiliation, and coerced loss of autonomy. Moreover, all abuse is interrelated, because, as researchers have demonstrated, most domestic violence is the fundamental operation of systemic oppression through the exertion of power and control. Given the effectiveness of …


Recognizing Marriage, William J. Rich Aug 2008

Recognizing Marriage, William J. Rich

William Rich

Recognizing Marriage Abstract Two adults living in the United States already have the right to form enduring relationships, to cohabit, and to identify themselves as married. The path towards full social and legal recognition of marriage for individuals of the same sex, however, must still be developed and will involve multiple steps requiring careful navigation. That path begins with broadening social acceptance, including extension of employment benefits, acceptance within progressive social and religious organizations, and support for children living with same sex couples. Legal acceptance will inevitably follow these changes in society, but in a majority of states, significant road …


It's Not Just Shopping, Urban Lofts, And The Lesbian Gay-By Boom: How Sexual Orientation Demographics Can Inform Family Courts, Todd Brower Aug 2008

It's Not Just Shopping, Urban Lofts, And The Lesbian Gay-By Boom: How Sexual Orientation Demographics Can Inform Family Courts, Todd Brower

todd brower

Courts today are deeply involved in matters involving lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered persons. Same-sex marriage, custody disputes, conflict with religious claims and other, more routine family law cases all bring sexual orientation minorities into the judicial system as parties, witnesses, lawyers, or jurors. Like sexuality, gender and gender roles have traditionally and significantly influenced these issues. Nevertheless, judges and the legal system often have little factual information about the lesbians and gay men who appear in their courtrooms, instead relying on stereotypes of gay persons. Such reliance fails to see the real people currently present in family courts and …


Two To Tango, One In Limbo: A Comparative Analysis Of Fathers' Rights In Infant Adoptions, Margaret Ryznar Aug 2008

Two To Tango, One In Limbo: A Comparative Analysis Of Fathers' Rights In Infant Adoptions, Margaret Ryznar

Margaret Ryznar

Many American and English courts today permit infant adoptions without notifying or seeking the consent of biological fathers. However, children’s best interests would be better served by recognizing their father-child relationship, instead of institutionally denying it. Any legal approach that ignores the biological father devalues the importance of a child’s placement in the paternal family unit, the significance of the medical history on the father’s side, the emotional link between a father and his child, and the father’s legal right to his own child. This comparative law Article therefore argues, using the American and English legal systems as illustrative examples, …


Bloodstains On A "Code Of Honor", Kenneth Lasson Aug 2008

Bloodstains On A "Code Of Honor", Kenneth Lasson

Kenneth Lasson

Abstract In the real world of the Twenty-first Century, deep biases against women are prevalent in much of Muslim society. Although there is no explicit approval of honor killing in Islamic law (Sharia), its culture remains fundamentally patriarchal. As unfathomable as it is to Western minds, “honor killing” is a facet of traditional patriarchy, and its condonation can be traced largely to ancient tribal practices. Justifications for it can be found in the codes of Hammurabi and in the family law of the Roman Empire. Unfortunately, honor killings in the Twenty-first Century are not isolated incidents, nor can they be …


It Takes Three, Baby: The Lack Of Standard, Legal Definitions Of “Best Interest Of The Child” And The Right To Contract For Lesbian Potential Parents, Harvey L. Fiser, Paula K. Garrett Jul 2008

It Takes Three, Baby: The Lack Of Standard, Legal Definitions Of “Best Interest Of The Child” And The Right To Contract For Lesbian Potential Parents, Harvey L. Fiser, Paula K. Garrett

Harvey L. Fiser

In order to consider the plausibility of contracts regarding AI, this article will first review various options and legal ramifications for choices regarding AI and then focus on the effect of inconsistent application of the Uniform Parentage Act among states that have chosen to adopt any legislation. This legal conundrum creates major obstacles for lesbian couples in procreation and in legal protection for children and often denies lesbian Americans the right to equal enforcement of contracts. This article will then consider how the current standard of “best interest of the child” is being used in the absence of the UPA …


Scalia’S Ship Of Revulsion Has Sailed: Will Lawrence Protect Adults Who Adopt Lovers To Help Ensure Their Inheritance From Incest Prosecution?, Terry L. Turnipseed Jul 2008

Scalia’S Ship Of Revulsion Has Sailed: Will Lawrence Protect Adults Who Adopt Lovers To Help Ensure Their Inheritance From Incest Prosecution?, Terry L. Turnipseed

Terry L Turnipseed

SCALIA’S SHIP OF REVULSION HAS SAILED: WILL LAWRENCE PROTECT ADULTS WHO ADOPT LOVERS TO HELP ENSURE THEIR INHERITANCE FROM INCEST PROSECUTION? Terry L. Turnipseed Associate Professor of Law Syracuse University College of Law in•cest (ĭn'sěst') Sexual relations between family members or close relatives, including children related by adoption. There is a growing trend in this country – startling to many – of adopting one’s adult lover or spouse for various reasons, mostly inheritance-based. Should one who adopts his or her adult lover or spouse be prosecuted for incest? Think about it: the person is having sexual relations with his or …


Bionormativity And The Construction Of Parenthood, Katharine K. Baker Jun 2008

Bionormativity And The Construction Of Parenthood, Katharine K. Baker

All Faculty Scholarship

This piece explores the relationship between legal and biological parenthood. It examines how neither history, nor evolutionary biology nor moral philosophy dictate a legal regime in which parenthood must be based on biological connection, but that attraction to a biological (or “bionormative”) regime remains strong. In explaining why, it suggests that much of what attracts people to bionormativity is not biology itself, but the way in which a biological regime constructs parenthood as a private, exclusive and binary enterprise. It is these ancillary qualities of bionormativity that people may care the most about. Today, a variety of forces put pressure …


Bionormativity And The Construction Of Parenthood, Katharine K. Baker Jun 2008

Bionormativity And The Construction Of Parenthood, Katharine K. Baker

Katharine K. Baker

This piece explores the relationship between legal and biological parenthood. It examines how neither history, nor evolutionary biology nor moral philosophy dictate a legal regime in which parenthood must be based on biological connection, but that attraction to a biological (or “bionormative”) regime remains strong. In explaining why, it suggests that much of what attracts people to bionormativity is not biology itself, but the way in which a biological regime constructs parenthood as a private, exclusive and binary enterprise. It is these ancillary qualities of bionormativity that people may care the most about. Today, a variety of forces put pressure …


King Solomon’S Solution To The Disposition Of Embryos: Recognizing A Property Interest And Using Equitable Division, Kansas R. Gooden Apr 2008

King Solomon’S Solution To The Disposition Of Embryos: Recognizing A Property Interest And Using Equitable Division, Kansas R. Gooden

Kansas R Gooden

In your family law class, your professors have probably not lectured on the area of embryo disposition in divorce proceedings. Were you aware that courts across the country have ruled that the right not to procreate trumps the right to procreate in these situations? When divorce and IVF combine, it results in a complex legal battle. When a couple that used IVF divorces, who should get the remaining embryos? This article asserts that embryos should be considered property. The elements of ownership, possession, use, and exclusion, otherwise known as the bundle of sticks, are present. American law has taken an …


Banning The Flames: Constitutionality, Preemption, And Local Smoking Ordinances, Miles Coleman Apr 2008

Banning The Flames: Constitutionality, Preemption, And Local Smoking Ordinances, Miles Coleman

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


Legal Aspects Of Prior Informed Consent On Access To Genetic Resources: An Analysis Of Global And Local Implications Towards An Optimal Normative Construction, Kuei-Jung Ni Mar 2008

Legal Aspects Of Prior Informed Consent On Access To Genetic Resources: An Analysis Of Global And Local Implications Towards An Optimal Normative Construction, Kuei-Jung Ni

Kuei-Jung Ni

Since the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was in force, national implementation of the access to and benefit-sharing (ABS) requirement on genetic resources has been flourishing. Prior informed consent (PIC) of the ABS constitutes a major means to deter illegal bio-piracy and to ensure fair access to genetic resources. Given the differential social structure in individual nations, there seems to be no consistent pattern of PIC domestically. Some legislatures recognize the decisive role of indigenous or local communities in the context of enforcing PIC, making access to genetic resources impossible without their consent. On the other hand, several central governments …


Slaves In The Family: Testamentary Freedom And Interracial Deviance, Kevin Noble Maillard Mar 2008

Slaves In The Family: Testamentary Freedom And Interracial Deviance, Kevin Noble Maillard

Kevin Noble Maillard

This Article addresses the deviance of interracial sexuality acknowledged in testamentary documents. The language of wills calls into question the authority of probate and family law by forcing issues of deviance into the public realm. Will dramas, settled in or out of court, publicly unearth insecurities about family. Many objections to the stated intent of the testator generate from social prejudices toward certain kinds of interpersonal relationships: nonmarital, homosexual, and/or interracial. When pitted against an issue of a moral or social transgression, testamentary intent often fails. In order for these attacks on testamentary validity to succeed, they must be situated …


Foster Children And The Idea; The Fox Guarding The Henhouse, Rebekah Gleason Hope Mar 2008

Foster Children And The Idea; The Fox Guarding The Henhouse, Rebekah Gleason Hope

Rebekah G Hope

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) creates a complex bundle of rights that protects parents of children with disabilities in an effort to provide each child that is eligible with a free appropriate public education (FAPE). Children in the dependency system, commonly referred to as foster children, also require a free appropriate public education when they have disabilities that affect their learning, but they have no one to advocate for them or assist them in securing an appropriate educational program. They need a surrogate to take the place of the parents who are unable to fill that role. The …


Differential Power In Intact Same-Sex Families Based On Legal And Cultural Understandings Of Parentage, Deirdre M. Bowen Mar 2008

Differential Power In Intact Same-Sex Families Based On Legal And Cultural Understandings Of Parentage, Deirdre M. Bowen

Deirdre M Bowen

Do intact same-sex couples in which one member of the couple became pregnant with assisted reproduction or one member was the primary adopter, and the other member became a parent through second parent adoption understand the legal protections afforded them? In short the answer is no. An interesting family dynamic arises around who can claim the “true” status as parent based on their legal understandings of parenthood and their interactions with the dominant culture. While high profile custody cases on this issue have been decided in the United States with varying results, no research has examined the impact of uneven …


Same Sex Marriage In Argentina, Martin Hevia, Ezequiel Spector Feb 2008

Same Sex Marriage In Argentina, Martin Hevia, Ezequiel Spector

Martin Hevia

In recent years, same sex marriage has become one of the hottest legal and political topics worldwide. Latinamerica is not an exception to that rule. Recently, in September 2007, the Argentine National Civil Court of Appeals rejected an injunction brought by a couple of two women that wanted to get married. In the injunction, they said that Art. 172 of the Argentine Civil Code – which requires that marriage be celebrated between individuals of different sex – is unconstitutional. According to the Court, however, the different sex requirement established by Art. 172 has an “objective and reasonable” justification”: the state’s …


The Chicago School Virus, Spencer Weber Waller Jan 2008

The Chicago School Virus, Spencer Weber Waller

Spencer Weber Waller

The Chicago School of Law and Economics is a leading example of a highly successful legal ideology. As one recent commentator has noted: "[T]he basic characteristic of the Chicago School is the belief that free markets and the price mechanism are the most effective and desirable ways for a society to organize production and economic life in general." The Chicago School of Law and Economics applies these insights to legal questions and views the creation and enforcement of legal rules primarily in terms of how legal rules and institutions promote allocative efficiency and wealth maximization.

While much ink has been …


Permission To Protect: Massachusetts Pioneering Law Requiring Electronic Monitoring For Civil Protective Order Violators Advances Safety For Domestic Violence Victims, Julie M. Hofmeister Jan 2008

Permission To Protect: Massachusetts Pioneering Law Requiring Electronic Monitoring For Civil Protective Order Violators Advances Safety For Domestic Violence Victims, Julie M. Hofmeister

Julie M Hofmeister

Prevailing data suggests that domestic violence crimes, order of abuse protection requests, and restraining order violations, are at epidemic levels. Civil protective orders, which provide legal, but not personal, shelter for domestic violence victims, are not an absolute safeguard against abusers because abusers often violate the protection orders. As a result, the advancement of victim safety at home or the office is essential. Spearheading this issue, Massachusetts pioneered legislation permitting courts to require electronic monitoring (GPS) for civil protective order violators as an alternative to incarceration. Advocates urge that the success of electronic monitoring of sex offenders in Massachusetts as …


Kinship Foster Care: Implications Of Behavioral Biology Research, David Herring Jan 2008

Kinship Foster Care: Implications Of Behavioral Biology Research, David Herring

David J. Herring

Public child welfare systems rely heavily on kin to serve as foster parents, requiring public actors to consider and choose among different types of available kin (e.g. maternal grandmothers, paternal grandfathers, matrilateral aunts). Behavioral biology researchers have been exploring kinship relationships and the expected level of investment in child care for different types of kin. This paper explains the relevance to kinship foster care of behavioral biology research on kinship relationships and expected levels of parental investment. This research allows for the development of a rank listing of second-degree kin in terms of their likely level of investment in a …


Children, Kin And Court: Designing Third Party Custody Policy To Protect Children, Third Parties And Parents, Josh Gupta-Kagan Jan 2008

Children, Kin And Court: Designing Third Party Custody Policy To Protect Children, Third Parties And Parents, Josh Gupta-Kagan

Josh Gupta-Kagan

Millions of American children are primarily raised by people other than their parents, primarily grandparents and other kin, and millions more will be raised by third parties for some period of their childhood. In most such situations, informal arrangements negotiated by family members provide for these kinship networks to care for children effectively. But many cases require some formal legal arrangement. To enable third parties to obtain necessary services and benefits for children in their care whose parents are absent and to protect children from harm imposed by a parent in the proportionately rare but numerically significant situations in which …


Representing Children Representing What?, Annette Ruth Appell Jan 2008

Representing Children Representing What?, Annette Ruth Appell

annette appell

This essay reflects on how lawyering for children relates to the personhood of children and youth. More concretely, it critically explores the role of children’s lawyers in promoting the individual and systemic interests of their youthful constituents. At a time when children are increasingly viewed as rights-holders, provided with attorneys, and subject to coercive state intervention and restriction, questions regarding who speaks for children and how children’s voice informs discussions about childhood, dependency, family and community are particularly cogent. On behalf of individual, and classes of, children, lawyers are actively engaged in the creation, definition and promotion of rights regarding …


Raising The Cut-Off: The Empirical Case For Extending Adoption And Guardianship Subsidies From Age 18 To 21, Mary Eschelbach Hansen, Josh Gupta-Kagan Jan 2008

Raising The Cut-Off: The Empirical Case For Extending Adoption And Guardianship Subsidies From Age 18 To 21, Mary Eschelbach Hansen, Josh Gupta-Kagan

Mary Eschelbach Hansen

Adolescents increasingly rely financially on their parents or caretakers past age 18. Such reliance is likely to be greater among children who have been abused or neglected by their birth families, and who, by court finding, could not reunify with their parents. H.R. 6307, currently before Congress, would extend reimbursements to states for foster care maintenance payments until a youth turns 21.

H.R. 6307 would also provide federal support for guardianship subsidies, but only until age 18. Currently, federal funds support all adoption subsidies through age 18. The federal law permits states to extend federally-funded subsidies to age 21 only …


Using "A Jury Of Her Peers" To Teach About The Connection Between Domestic Violence And Animal Abuse, Caroline Forell Jan 2008

Using "A Jury Of Her Peers" To Teach About The Connection Between Domestic Violence And Animal Abuse, Caroline Forell

Caroline A Forell

In this essay I examine Susan Glaspell’s short story, A Jury of Her Peers, in the context of teaching about the connection between domestic violence and animal abuse in an Animal Law course. I discuss how Glaspell’s story, in which the motive for a woman killing her husband is his killing of her pet bird, enables students to better understand the perspective of battered women who behave in certain ways because they have pets. I pose several questions concerning how the law would and should respond when a battered woman reacts with violence to the killing or serious injury of …


The Disruption Of Marital Eharmony: Distinguishing Mail-Order Brides From Online Dating In Evaluating "Good Faith Marriage", Brandon N. Robinson Jan 2008

The Disruption Of Marital Eharmony: Distinguishing Mail-Order Brides From Online Dating In Evaluating "Good Faith Marriage", Brandon N. Robinson

Brandon N. Robinson

ABSTRACT In today’s society, more and more people are turning to the information superhighway to find love. No longer confined to the girl or boy “next door,” many of today’s single men and women can connect with potential soul mates across the globe with the simple click of a button, symbolizing yet another consequence of a world community that is quickly becoming smaller and more interconnected. Once an international “match” has been made, the U.S. citizen can begin the complicated process of bringing his newfound loved one to the States. The IMO industry has a much more sinister underbelly, however, …