
Parental Rights and Responsibilities
Stephen Gilmore(Editor)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 4. January 2017
Book
Hardback
582 pages
978-1-4724-6337-1 (ISBN)
Description
This volume represents key scholarship on the issue of parental rights and responsibilities, selected from a dense forest of literature. The collection offers an overview of the subject and covers topics such as: underlying rationales of who or what is a parent; legal concepts of 'parent' and their linkage; the legal parent - accommodating complexity; the nature and scope of parental rights; shared parental responsibility; and parental rights and the state.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 246 mm
Width: 174 mm
Weight
1240 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4724-6337-1 (9781472463371)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Stephen Gilmore
Parental Rights and Responsibilities
E-Book
07/2017
1st Edition
Routledge
€455.99
Available for download

Stephen Gilmore
Parental Rights and Responsibilities
E-Book
07/2017
1st Edition
Routledge
€455.99
Available for download
Person
Stephen Gilmore is Professor of Family Law, King's College London.
Content
Contents: Introduction, Stephen Gilmore. Part I Who or What is a Parent? Underlying Rationales: The origin of parental rights, Barbara Hall; What does it mean to be a 'parent'? The claims of biology as the basis for parental rights, John Lawrence Hill; The intention to be a parent and the making of mothers, Gillian Douglas; Toward a pluralistic account of parenthood, Tim Bayne and Avery Kolers; Procreation and parental responsibility, Jeffrey Blustein; The moral basis of children's relational rights, James G. Dwyer; The changing face of adoption - the gift/donation model versus the contract/services model, N.V. Lowe. Part II Legal Concepts of 'Parent' and their Linkage: Parentage, parenthood and parental responsibility: subtle, elusive, yet important distinctions, Andrew Bainham; Rethinking parental responsibility, John Eekelaar. Part III The Legal Parent - Accommodating Complexity: Law and the complexities of parenting: parental status and parental function, Craig Lind and Tom Hewitt; What is a parent?, E. Jackson; Arguments about parentage, Andrew Bainham; Tangling the web of legal parenthood: legal responses to the use of known donors in lesbian parenting arrangements, Leanne Smith; Challenging presumptions: legal parenthood and surrogacy arrangements, Kirsty Horsey. Part IV The Nature and Scope of Parental Rights: The myth of parental rights, Phillip Montague; Conceptions of parental autonomy, Colin M. MacLeod; Is anything now left of parental rights?, Andrew Bainham; The welfare principle and the rights of parents, Jonathan Herring; Taking the rights of parents and children seriously: confronting the welfare principle under the Human Rights Act, S. Choudhry and H. Fenwick. Part V Shared Parental Responsibility: The meaning and allocation of parental responsibility - a common lawyer's perspective, N.V. Lowe; The degradation of parental responsibility, H. Reece; Legislating for shared time parenting after separation: a research review, Belinda Fehlberg, Bruce Smyth, Mavis Maclean and Ceridwen Roberts. Part VI Parental Rights and the State: Licensing parents revisited, Hugh LaFollette; Child abuse: parental rights and the interests of the child, David Archard; Making and breaking family life: adoption, the state, and human rights, Sonia Harris-Short. Index.