Among them are the rights to: bullet joint parenting; bullet joint adoption; bullet joint foster care, custody, and visitation (including non-biological parents); bullet status as next -
of - kin for hospital visits and medical decisions where one partner is too ill to be competent; bullet joint insurance policies for home, auto and health; bullet dissolution and divorce protections such as community
property and child support; bullet immigration and residency for partners from other countries; bullet inheritance automatically in the absence
of a will; bullet joint leases with automatic renewal rights in the
event one partner dies or leaves the house or apartment; bullet inheritance
of jointly - owned real and personal
property through the right
of survivorship (which avoids the time and expense and taxes in probate); bullet benefits such as annuities, pension plans, Social Security, and Medicare; bullet spousal exemptions to
property tax increases upon the death
of one partner who is a co-owner
of the home; bullet veterans» discounts on medical care, education, and home loans; joint filing
of tax returns; bullet joint filing
of customs claims when traveling; bullet wrongful death benefits for a surviving partner and children; bullet bereavement or sick leave to care for a partner or child; bullet decision - making power with respect to whether a deceased partner will be cremated or not and where to bury him or her; bullet
crime victims» recovery benefits; bullet loss
of consortium tort benefits; bullet domestic violence protection orders; bullet judicial protections and evidentiary immunity; bullet and more...
Other research highlighted at the Centre for
Crime and Justice Studies event looked at changes in domestic property crime patterns during the 1980s and 1990s, presented by Professor Stephen Farrall of the University of Sheff
Crime and Justice Studies
event looked at changes in domestic
property crime patterns during the 1980s and 1990s, presented by Professor Stephen Farrall of the University of Sheff
crime patterns during the 1980s and 1990s, presented by Professor Stephen Farrall
of the University
of Sheffield.