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The Rights of Families: The Authoritative ACLU Guide to the Rights of Family Members Today (ACLU Handbook) (Hardcover)

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Description


In this new ACLU handbook, the authors use a simple question-and-answer format to clearly and concisely explain the legal rights of members of today’s rapidly changing families.

Family law over the last quarter of a century has undergone a revolution. Stepparents, adoptive parents, foster parents, single parents, grandparents, and gay parents have come forward to challenge the traditional definition of a family based on blood ties alone. Once taboo, divorce has shed its social stigma, leading to new laws regarding the division of property and alimony among divorced people. And increased national attention has been focused on abuse and neglect of children in their homes.

This book is designed to help readers understand where the law now stands.

Part 1 looks at the human and financial consequences of a married couple’s divorce or the separation of unmarried partners, describing the law in such areas as child custody, visitation, child support, property division, and alimony. Part 2 looks at the law that applies when the state intervenes either temporarily or permanently to protect children from harm by their parents. Part 3 looks at how families are formed, especially families that differ from the traditional nuclear family: adoptive, gay and lesbian, and single-parent families as well as families headed by a grandparent.

Few areas of law have changed more rapidly than family law. This is the best guide available for up-to-date information and advice.

About the Author


Martin Guggenheim is a professor of clinical law and the director of Clinical and Advocacy Programs at New York University School of Law.

Alexandra Dylan Lowe writes and advocates in the field of family law and adoption.

Diane Curtis is an attorney at the Center for Reproductive Law and Policy.

Praise For…


"At an earlier time in this country’s history, the courts and society in general had a clear, if narrow, conception of how a family was formed: men and women married and conceived children together. Divorce was relatively uncommon and required proof of marital misconduct. Children born out-of-wedlock had few if any rights. Women had little or no control over the bearing of children. Adoption was controlled by adoption agencies and was, in most families, a closely guarded secret. Gays and lesbians stayed in the closet. The right of children to be protected from physical abuse or neglect by their parents was barely articulated. In vitro fertilization, surrogate parenting, and other complex reproductive technologies were unheard of."—from the Introduction


Product Details
ISBN: 9780809320516
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Publication Date: November 1st, 1996
Pages: 360
Language: English
Series: ACLU Handbook