Cohabitation without marriage is now a normal part of modern family life, but the law still does not treat it the same way everywhere. Many couples live together for years, raise children together, buy property together, and assume that the law will step in if the relationship ends or one partner dies. In practice, that […]
Family law and inheritance law often collide at the most difficult moment a family faces: death. When a parent or spouse dies, the legal system must answer emotionally charged questions that many families never resolved in writing. Should the surviving spouse be protected first because marriage created a shared economic life? Should children inherit immediately […]
When a marriage breaks down, many people assume there is only one legal path: divorce. In reality, family law often recognizes two very different remedies: divorce and annulment. They may both end a relationship in practical terms, but they do not do the same legal job. A divorce ends a marriage that the law treats […]
Cross-border families are now common. People marry in one country, separate in another, relocate with children, hold property in several states, and obtain court orders far from where they eventually need to use them. That is why recognition of foreign divorce judgments and family law decisions has become one of the most important subjects in […]
International child abduction and cross-border custody disputes are among the most urgent and technically difficult matters in family law. They sit at the intersection of parental responsibility, custody rights, international jurisdiction, emergency remedies, and child protection. In most legal systems, a parent cannot lawfully relocate a child across borders in a way that breaches the […]
The short legal answer is usually no, not unilaterally. In most family-law systems, a parent cannot simply decide to move abroad with a child if the other parent has custody rights, parental responsibility, or an existing court order that gives them a say over where the child lives. If a parent leaves without the required […]
Grandparents often play a central role in a child’s life. They may provide emotional support, daily care, housing, financial help, or stability during family crisis. But in family law, that practical importance does not automatically translate into an independent, unrestricted legal right to court-ordered contact. Grandparents’ rights in child custody and visitation disputes are usually […]
Guardianship is one of the most serious protective tools in family law and probate law because it allows a court to place major decision-making authority in the hands of another adult when a child or an impaired adult cannot safely manage essential affairs alone. Even though the same word is often used in ordinary conversation, […]