Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure

Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure

199.00

The new legal regime of children and family law examined, analysed and  explained

Description

Author: Dr Geoffrey Shannon | ISBN:  978-1-905536-74-0 | Format and Price:  Hardback €199  | Publication Date: June 2016

About

The Children and Family Relationships Act 2015 gives legal recognition to the many different and diverse relationships that exist in modern day Ireland. It is the most comprehensive amendment to the law on children and family relationships in many decades. The author, Dr Geoffrey Shannon, in Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure, examines, analyses and explains this new legal regime.

Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure addresses a wide-range of new issues. These include:

  • parental rights in diverse family arrangements;
  • parentage in cases of assisted reproduction;
  • the establishment of a national donor-conceived person register;
  • the “best interests” principle with regard to children;
  • joint adoption for civil partners/co-habiting partners;
  • access entitlements for a wider range of people;
  • defined maintenance provisions for civil partners and cohabiting partners living with a child for a certain amount of time;
  • provisions to help “make parenting work”;
  • the formalisation of the relationship between a child and their de facto parent.

 

Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure also addresses the six new different pathways to guardianship, expanding the duties, obligations and rights of guardians and thereby further bolstering the rights of children. For the first time, non-marital fathers cohabiting for a specified period with the child’s mother will be entitled to automatic guardianship.

Under the 2015 Act a parent or another eligible adult can apply to court for guardianship. An eligible adult is a person who is married to or in a civil partnership with a child’s parent, or has cohabited with the child’s parent for three years and shared responsibility for the child’s care for a two year period. Persons who have cared for the child for one year, where no other parent or guardian is able or willing to fulfil the rights and duties of the role, may also be eligible to apply for guardianship. This therefore allows foster parents and other adults who provide day-to-day care for children to apply for guardianship.

The Children and Family Relationships Act 2015 is far reaching and, as illustrated, fundamentally changes family law in Ireland. Children and Family Relationships Law in Ireland: Practice and Procedure is the first book to address the far reaching changes.


About the Author

Dr Geoffrey Shannon is a solicitor and a senior lecturer in Family and Child Law at the Law Society of Ireland. He is the Government Special Rapporteur for Child Protection, Chairman of the Adoption Authority of Ireland and the Irish Expert Member on the Commission on European Family Law. Dr Shannon is the recipient of several awards for his work in the area of children’s rights and national and international family law. These include the 2005 JCI Outstanding Person of the Year Award, the 2006 Canon Maurice Handy Award and the 2013 Irish Law Award. Dr Shannon is a prolific author and has written leading texts on national and international child and family law. He is also the editor of the Irish Journal of Family Law and the Adjunct Professor in Family and Child Law at the University of Limerick.

Content includes

PART  I

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: International Legal Framework

Chapter 3: Children’s Rights

Chapter 4: Parentage

Chapter 5: Guardianship, Custody and Access

Chapter 6: Dispute Resolution and Enforcement Orders

Chapter 7: Adoption

Chapter 8: Maintenance

Chapter 9: Civil Partnership

 

PART  II: COMPREHENSIVE ANNOTATION OF 2015 ACT

 Chapter 10: Children and Family Relationships Act 2015 Annotated

 

PART III: COURT RULES 2016 GUIDANCE (Comprehensive Annotation of Relevant Court Rules and Forms)

Chapter 11: District Court (Children and Family Relationships Act 2015) Rules 2016

Chapter 12: Circuit Court Rules (Children and Family Relationships Act 2015) 2016

Chapter 13: Rules of the Superior Courts (Children and Family Relationships Act 2015) 2016

Who Should Buy This Book?

This book is an absolute must for all legal practitioners working in the area of family and child law.

 

 

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