THE EVOLUTION OF THE LEGAL RAMIFICATIONS OF PARENTAGE
When parents divorce, these rights and duties are allocated between the parents, with one parent often having certain rights and duties to the complete exclusion of the other parent. [...]the rights and duties are not necessarily given exclusively to biological parents, as the law recognizes that gr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | GP solo 2021-01, Vol.38 (1), p.58-59 |
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description | When parents divorce, these rights and duties are allocated between the parents, with one parent often having certain rights and duties to the complete exclusion of the other parent. [...]the rights and duties are not necessarily given exclusively to biological parents, as the law recognizes that grandparents, stepparents, and, in some states, de facto parents often are the primary caretakers of children and may therefore be granted the legal rights of parents. [...]parents have the right to autonomously raise their children, and courts must presume that they act in their children's best interest. Under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), parents have the right to access their child's report cards, transcripts, disciplinary records, contact and family information, and class schedules. 20 U.S.C. § 1232g. [...]a child reaches maturity, his or her earnings and estate are actually the property of the parents. |
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subjects | Analysis Best interests of the child doctrine Child discipline Children & youth Divorce Education Families & family life Family law Handbooks History Laws, regulations and rules Parent and child (Law) Parental rights Parents & parenting Privacy Act 1974-US State court decisions State laws Trials |
title | THE EVOLUTION OF THE LEGAL RAMIFICATIONS OF PARENTAGE |
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