No-fault Divorce: What Went Wrong?Avalon Publishing, 1992. gada 20. jūl. - 167 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 44.
1. lappuse
... statute in the United States.1 Over the following fifteen years , all the other states and the District of Columbia enacted similar statutes establishing " irretrievable breakdown " or " incompatibility " as the only grounds for divorce ...
... statute in the United States.1 Over the following fifteen years , all the other states and the District of Columbia enacted similar statutes establishing " irretrievable breakdown " or " incompatibility " as the only grounds for divorce ...
8. lappuse
... statute was enacted in California in 1969. The California statute has been described as " pure " because it based divorce exclusively on the factual breakdown of the marriage . See Herma Hill Kay , " Equality and Difference : A ...
... statute was enacted in California in 1969. The California statute has been described as " pure " because it based divorce exclusively on the factual breakdown of the marriage . See Herma Hill Kay , " Equality and Difference : A ...
9. lappuse
... statutes rapidly were enacted by the states . Iowa passed its no- fault divorce statute in 1971. By August 1977 , only three states retained essentially fault grounds for divorce . See Doris J. Freed and Henry H. Foster , Jr ...
... statutes rapidly were enacted by the states . Iowa passed its no- fault divorce statute in 1971. By August 1977 , only three states retained essentially fault grounds for divorce . See Doris J. Freed and Henry H. Foster , Jr ...
Saturs
Introduction | 1 |
The Economics of Marriage and Divorce | 25 |
The Economics of Divorce | 35 |
Autortiesības | |
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
agreements alimony arrangements at divorce assets awards benefits California child support common law community property compensation contract law costs of divorce couples courts decisions definition of property dissolution dissolve the marriage divorce rate Divorce Reform Divorce Revolution divorced spouse divorced women economists effect of marriage effect of no-fault efficient breaches Elizabeth Peters employment expected fault divorce fault grounds financial arrangements financial settlements future earnings gains from marriage grounds for divorce Hayes household commodities household production human capital husband Ibid incentive income income-earning increase incurred individuals introduction of no-fault investments labor force Law Review marital property Marriage and Divorce married women Mary Ann Glendon mutual consent negotiating power no-fault divorce laws no-fault grounds occur parties percent production possibility frontiers professional goodwill property settlements recognize reduced result separate property specialize in household specific performance spouse's substantial tend wages Weitzman welfare wife wives
Atsauces uz šo grāmatu
From Partners to Parents: The Second Revolution in Family Law June Carbone Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2000 |
The Postdivorce Family: Children, Parenting, and Society Ross A. Thompson,Paul R. Amato Fragmentu skats - 1999 |