Full Definition of Family Law
As a branch of civil law, family law involves the legal issues pertaining to the relationships among family members. Family law encompasses a broad scope of issues, including adoption, child custody, divorce, domestic violence, juvenile dependency and delinquency, property rights, support obligations, visitation rights and paternity. Family law courts are governed at the state level, so the laws and regulations may vary by state.
The grounds for divorce depend on the state, and may be based on no-fault or fault. A no-fault divorce is available in some form in all 50 states; many states also have fault-based grounds as an additional option. A no-fault divorce is one in which neither the husband nor the wife officially blames the other for the breakdown of the marriage. Common bases for no-fault divorce are "irreconcilable differences," "irretrievable breakdown" or "incompatibility." Another common basis for no-fault divorce is that the parties have lived separately for a certain period of time with the intent that the separation be permanent. The list of grounds for a fault-based divorce may include: adultery, physical cruelty, mental cruelty, attempted murder, desertion, habitual drunkenness, use of addictive drugs, insanity, impotency, and infection of one’s spouse with venereal disease.
If the parents cannot agree on custody of their child, the courts decide custody based on "the best interests of the child." Determining the child’s best interests involves many factors, no one of which is the most important factor. All 50 states have adopted child support guidelines. Some states use tables that indicate a support amount for different ranges of income, similar to tax tables. Although some states base support on the payor’s income, many states use an income shares model, which is based on the income of both parents.
Adoption is the process by which a legal parent-child relationship is created between individuals not biologically parent and child. In most cases, adopted children may inherit on an equal basis with biological children under state laws of distribution upon death of a parent. In some states, doctrines of "equitable adoption" allow courts to recognize adoptions when not all statutory procedures have been carried out.
- Adoptions Law
- Agency Adoptions Law
- Alimony Law
- Annulment Law
- Assisted Reproductive Technology Law
- Child Abduction Law
- Child Abuse and Neglect Law
- Child Advocacy Law
- Child Care Law
- Child Custody Law
- Child Custody Mediation Law
- Child Dependency Law
- Child Protection Law
- Child Sexual Abuse Law
- Child Support Law
- Child Welfare Law
- Childrens Rights Law
- Civil Unions Law
- Cohabitation Agreements Law
- Collaborative Family Law
- Community Property Law
- Day Care Law
- Divorce Law
- Divorce Arbitration Law
- Divorce Mediation Law
- Divorce Taxation Law
- Domestic Partnerships Law
- Domestic Relations Law
- Domestic Torts Law
- Domestic Violence Law
- Equitable Distribution Law
- Family Arbitration Law
- Family Mediation Law
- Fathers Rights Law
- Foster Care Law
- Gay and Lesbian Family Law
- Grandparents Custody Law
- Grandparents Visitation Rights Law
- Independent Adoptions Law
- International Adoptions Law
- International Child Abduction Law
- International Child Custody Law
- International Family Law
- Interstate Adoptions Law
- Interstate Child Custody Law
- Interstate Support Law
- Juvenile Criminal Law
- Juvenile Delinquency Law
- Juvenile Dependency Law
- Juvenile Law
- Legal Separation Law
- Marital Agreements Law
- Marital Property Distribution Law
- Marital Property Law
- Marital Property Settlements Law
- Matrimonial Bankruptcy Law
- Matrimonial Law
- Military Divorce Law
- Name Changes Law
- No Fault Divorce Law
- Non-Traditional Family Law
- Orphans Court Practice Law
- Palimony Law
- Parental Kidnapping Law
- Parental Rights Law
- Parenting Time Law
- Paternity Law
- Post Divorce Modification Law
- Post Nuptial Agreements Law
- Premarital Agreements Law
- Private Adoptions Law
- Qualified Domestic Relations Orders (QDROs) Law
- Restraining Orders Law
- Same Sex Marriage Law
- Spousal Support Law
- Step Parent Adoptions Law
- Surrogacy Law
- Termination of Parental Rights Law
- Third Party Custody Law
- Uncontested Divorce Law
- Visitation Rights Law




