In Arizona,
joint custody refers to the sharing of parenting responsibilities and includes both physical custody and legal custody.
Joint custody refers to both parents having significant physical time with their children.
Joint custody refers to a relationship where both parents share an equal responsibility for decision - making.
Joint custody refers to the shared physical and / or legal custody of a child after the parents separate or divorce.
Not exact matches
Shared parenting
refers to a
joint custody arrangement where both parents share approximately equal parenting time.
«
Joint physical
custody», often
referred to as shared parenting means parents share equal legal
custody but not necessarily equal physical
custody of the child (ren).
For more information about how to win
joint custody, speak with a qualified attorney in your state or
refer to other references about strategies to help win child
custody.
Joint custody, on the other hand, can
refer to legal
custody, physical
custody, or both.
Joint physical
custody refers to where the children reside on a daily basis.
«
Joint physical
custody», often
referred to as shared parenting means both parents share equal legal
custody but not necessarily equal physical
custody of the child (ren).
Most
custody arrangements are «
joint custody,» which generally
refers to a shared legal
custody even if only one parent has physical
custody.
In child
custody situations, «
joint custody» usually
refers to one of two possible scenarios:
joint legal and physical
custody, or
joint legal
custody.
There are two types of legal
custody: (i) «sole legal
custody»
refers to when only one of the parents has these rights; and (ii) «
joint legal
custody» is where both parents have the same rights and responsibilities for the major decisions for the child.
Parents sharing
joint legal
custody (now
referred to as
joint legal decision making) must reach agreements regarding major life decisions affecting their children.
As a result, the term «
joint custody» does not
refer to equal time spent at each parent's house.
Courts may rule that both parents have
custody of a child,
referred to as shared or
joint custody.
In Long Island, New York, physical
custody refers to the place where the child primarily lives regardless of whether there is a
joint custody agreement between the parents.
Are you
referring to
joint custody with primary residency vs. sole
custody?
In Colorado, the term «shared
custody»
refers to shared physical living arrangements, and the term «
joint custody»
refers to shared decision making.
If, however, the child splits his or her time living with both parents, this will be
referred to as
joint physical
custody.
In the past, this was
referred to as «
joint physical
custody.»
The court can award sole or
joint legal
custody, which
refers to a parent's right to make major decisions concerning the child — such as medical and educational decisions.
Although a
joint legal
custody agreement
refers specifically to legal
custody, it is possible to address both legal and physical
custody in a single document.
Joint custody can refer to joint legal custody or joint physical custody, or
Joint custody can
refer to
joint legal custody or joint physical custody, or
joint legal
custody or
joint physical custody, or
joint physical
custody, or both.
Physical
custody refers to which parent your child will live with most of the time, and courts are slower to award
joint physical
custody.
What
joint custody does is REDUCE the amount of time and attention a child receives from its primary parent (who we now
refer to as the custodial parent — CP), to be made up, presumably, by the other parent.
In some states, such as Virginia, the term, «
joint custody»
refers to both physical and legal
custody.
A parent who has been granted sole or
joint decision making authority (sometimes
referred to as «
custody») following a divorce or allocation of parental responsibility case («APR case») may delegate that authority to another person for up to nine months.
Joint legal
custody refers to the shared responsibility, regardless of where the children are living, for making such major decisions as where they will go to school and what their religious upbringing will be.
Many jurisdictions
refer to the concept as
joint physical
custody.
In some states, such as New York, the phrase, «
joint custody»
refers only to legal
custody.
Legal
custody refers to a parent's right to make important decisions for a child; courts commonly award
joint legal
custody, meaning the parents share the right to make important decisions, such as what medical care the child receives.
Although the term «
joint custody»
refers only to legal decision - making, the child must still live somewhere.
In New York, when the term «
joint custody» is used, it
refers only to
joint legal
custody.
In
joint physical
custody situations, the child usually spends marginally more time with one parent,
referred to as the «primary custodial parent.»
Most commonly, the phrase «
joint custody»
refers to
joint legal
custody — the right of both parents to contribute to important decisions regarding their child's upbringing.
Split
custody, also
referred to as
joint custody or shared
custody, is a legal term used to describe a situation in which multiple individuals have legal rights to a child.
When a child lives a relatively equal amount of time in each parent's home, this is
referred to as shared
custody, also often called
joint custody.
This arrangement is
referred to as
joint legal
custody, and includes decisions related to the child's religious affiliation, education and the authority to consent to or refuse medical treatment.
Joint physical
custody refers to the sharing of overnights with the child.
Joint residential
custody in Kentucky is sometimes
referred to as 50/50
custody or 50/50 parenting time.
«
Joint physical
custody», often
referred to as shared parenting means parents share equal legal
custody but not necessarily equal physical
custody of the child (ren).
«
Joint custody», often
referred to as shared parenting means parents share equal legal
custody but not necessarily equal physical
custody of the child (ren).
Refer to
Custody,
Joint Custody,
Joint Legal
Custody, or Shared Parenting.
Refer to
Joint Physical
Custody,
Joint Legal
Custody or Shared Parenting.
In child
custody situations, «
joint custody» usually
refers to one of two possible scenarios:
joint legal and physical
custody, or
joint legal
custody.
Joint custody, on the other hand, can
refer to legal
custody, physical
custody, or both.
Joint custody, also commonly referred to as shared custody, is one where the both co-parents act as custodial parents over the child, giving them both joint physical cus
Joint custody, also commonly
referred to as shared
custody, is one where the both co-parents act as custodial parents over the child, giving them both
joint physical cus
joint physical
custody.
Joint custody can also refer to joint physical custody, in which the child spends time with each parent, either on a roughly even basis or in blocks of time that are, in effect, no greater than visitation under a sole custody arrange
Joint custody can also
refer to
joint physical custody, in which the child spends time with each parent, either on a roughly even basis or in blocks of time that are, in effect, no greater than visitation under a sole custody arrange
joint physical
custody, in which the child spends time with each parent, either on a roughly even basis or in blocks of time that are, in effect, no greater than visitation under a sole
custody arrangement.
The term, dual, or
joint,
custody refers to the legal doctrine awarding parents the equal right to direct the upbringing of their child.