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Family Law 4th Revised edition


Family Law 4th Revised edition

Paperback by Welstead, Mary (CAP Fellow, Child Advocacy Program, Harvard Law School and Visiting Professor of Family Law, University of Buckingham); Edwards, Susan (Barrister and Professor of Law, University of Buckingham)

Family Law

£44.99

ISBN:
9780199664207
Publication Date:
13 Jun 2013
Edition/language:
4th Revised edition / English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
640 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 13 - 21 May 2024
Family Law

Description

Family Law is part of the Core Text Series, a range of textbooks from OUP which provide focused and reliable guides for students of law at all levels. Written with authority by leading academics and renowned for their readability and clarity, these invaluable texts provide a straightforward analysis and discussion of the subject and its challenges. Family Law enables students to develop a clear understanding of the law, providing an insight into the tensions that surround family life in all its forms. The complex personal relations between adults, their children, and the State, are all fully explored and the controversial issues which face family lawyers today are highlighted. This fourth edition has been fully edited and updated, as well as partly rewritten, to provide a reliable and critical overview suitable for all family law courses. Clearly written and presented, Family Law incorporates chapter summaries and self-test questions which alert the reader to key topics for discussion and reflection. Selected reading lists at the end of each chapter encourage further research and help in essay preparation. This book is accompanied by an Online Resource Centre featuring regular author updates to keep the reader informed of changes to the law post-publication, and a selection of helpful websites. Visit www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/orc/welstead4e/ for more details.

Contents

1. Introduction to family law ; 2. State intervention in personal relationships ; 3. Nullity and its consequences ; 4. Acquisition and protection of rights in the family home ; 5. Domestic violence ; 6. Ending relationships ; 7. Financial consequences of relationships ; 8. Death and its consequences ; 9. Parents and family: rights and responsibilities ; 10. Adoption ; 11. Adolescent rights: autonomy and participation ; 12. Children's welfare and private disputes ; 13. In the child's best interests: the jurisdiction of wardship ; 14. Child protection: the public law procedure ; 15. Protecting children from 'significant harm': constructing the law ; 16. Financial provision for children

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