Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

International Survey of Family Law

View through CrossRef
The International Society of Family Law is an independent, international, and non-political scholarly association dedicated to the study, research and discussion of family law and related disciplines. The Society's membership currently includes professors, lecturers, scholars, teachers, and researchers from more than 50 different countries, offering a unique opportunity for networking within a truly international family law community. The International Survey of Family Law is the annual review of the International Society of Family Law. It brings together reliable and clearly structured insights into the latest and most notable developments in family law from all around the globe. Chapters are prepared by an international team of selected experts in the field, usually covering 20 or more jurisdictions in each edition. The 2020 edition addresses issues that relate to the whole fabric of family life, from surrogacy, assisted reproduction and adoption, to the care of vulnerable adults and elderly people. The chapters are particularly diverse in this edition, dealing with family formation, the functioning of intact families and families during or post-dissolution. Further chapters examine the protection of children by international organisations. Once again, our authors include emerging scholars as well as highly regarded academics, judges and practitioners. With contributions by David Accioly de Carvalho, Martha Bailey, Malgorzata Balwicka-Szczyrba, Bastien Baret, Christine Bidaud, Claire Brunerie, Aurore Camuzat, Clara Delmas, Nina Dethloff, Ruina Feng, Éric Fongaro, Hugues Fulchiron, Melanija Jančić, Katharina Kaesling, Guillaume Kessler, Olga A. Khazova, Suzana Kraljic, Alenka Križnik, Torunn E. Kvisberg, Dongjin Lee, Xia Li, Ledina Mandija, Benyam Dawit Mezmur, Guillaume Millerioux, Najma Moosa, Amélie Panet-Marre, Antonio Jorge Pereira Júnior, Elizabeth S. Perry, Grant T. Riethmuller, Anne Scully-Johnson, Elaine E. Sutherland, Anna Sylwestrzak, Caroline Tiefenbach, Richard Vessaud and Mary Welstead.MARGARET BRINIG is Professor of Law Emerita at the University of Notre Dame. She is an elected member of the American Law Institute and part of the Executive Council of the International Society of Family Law.
Intersentia
Title: International Survey of Family Law
Description:
The International Society of Family Law is an independent, international, and non-political scholarly association dedicated to the study, research and discussion of family law and related disciplines.
The Society's membership currently includes professors, lecturers, scholars, teachers, and researchers from more than 50 different countries, offering a unique opportunity for networking within a truly international family law community.
The International Survey of Family Law is the annual review of the International Society of Family Law.
It brings together reliable and clearly structured insights into the latest and most notable developments in family law from all around the globe.
Chapters are prepared by an international team of selected experts in the field, usually covering 20 or more jurisdictions in each edition.
The 2020 edition addresses issues that relate to the whole fabric of family life, from surrogacy, assisted reproduction and adoption, to the care of vulnerable adults and elderly people.
The chapters are particularly diverse in this edition, dealing with family formation, the functioning of intact families and families during or post-dissolution.
Further chapters examine the protection of children by international organisations.
Once again, our authors include emerging scholars as well as highly regarded academics, judges and practitioners.
With contributions by David Accioly de Carvalho, Martha Bailey, Malgorzata Balwicka-Szczyrba, Bastien Baret, Christine Bidaud, Claire Brunerie, Aurore Camuzat, Clara Delmas, Nina Dethloff, Ruina Feng, Éric Fongaro, Hugues Fulchiron, Melanija Jančić, Katharina Kaesling, Guillaume Kessler, Olga A.
Khazova, Suzana Kraljic, Alenka Križnik, Torunn E.
Kvisberg, Dongjin Lee, Xia Li, Ledina Mandija, Benyam Dawit Mezmur, Guillaume Millerioux, Najma Moosa, Amélie Panet-Marre, Antonio Jorge Pereira Júnior, Elizabeth S.
Perry, Grant T.
Riethmuller, Anne Scully-Johnson, Elaine E.
Sutherland, Anna Sylwestrzak, Caroline Tiefenbach, Richard Vessaud and Mary Welstead.
MARGARET BRINIG is Professor of Law Emerita at the University of Notre Dame.
She is an elected member of the American Law Institute and part of the Executive Council of the International Society of Family Law.

Related Results

Cicero on Natural Law and Ideal Laws
Cicero on Natural Law and Ideal Laws
Aristotle takes over many of the political ideas of the Laws in the final two books of his Politics, but despite following Plato on some things he makes no use of the idea of pream...
Seeking Sanctuary
Seeking Sanctuary
Seeking Sanctuary explores a curious aspect of premodern English law: the right of felons to shelter in a church or ecclesiastical precinct, remaining safe from arrest and trial in...
Television Blackout Hearings 1972–1977
Television Blackout Hearings 1972–1977
This chapter focuses on the Congressional hearings of 1972–1977 that addressed the National Football League's (NFL) television blackout rules. It first considers the economic and l...
The American mosaic
The American mosaic
Robert E. Stipe, Building, 1988, U.S. Committee, International Council on Monuments and Sites...
Luʼiz Shats
Luʼiz Shats
Louise Schatz, Industrial Arbitration, 1969, Muzeʼon Yiśraʼel...
Solid waste management
Solid waste management
Gottlieb, Robert, Refuse and refuse disposal, 1990, American Planning Association...
Habeas Circus
Habeas Circus
Alan Gerson, Caricatures and cartoons, 2001, River City Pub...

Back to Top