Married parents are automatically
joint guardians of their children.
If the parents of a child marry each other after the birth, then the father automatically becomes
a joint guardian of the child (provided that the father's name is on the birth certificate).
Not exact matches
Established on
Joint Base Andrews in 2011 to provide outstanding educational opportunities for military and community students, Imagine Andrews Public Charter School is a member
of Imagine Schools, a full - service charter school management organization that operates 72 schools in 12 states and helps nearly 80,000 parents and
guardians educate their
children.
In 2008 our legislature enacted S.C. Code § 63-5-30, which begins, «The mother and father are the
joint natural
guardians of their minor
children and are equally charged with the welfare and education
of their minor
children and the care and management
of the estates
of their minor
children; and the mother and father have equal power, rights, and duties, and neither parent has any right paramount to the right
of the other concerning the custody
of the minor....»
A. the exclusive right to consent to medical, dental, and surgical treatment involving invasive procedures and to consent to psychiatric and psychological treatment
of the
child; B. the right to represent the
child in legal action and to make other decisions
of substantial legal significance concerning the
child; C. the right to consent to marriage and to enlistment in the armed forces
of the United States; D. the right to make decisions concerning the
child's education; E. the right to the services and earnings
of the
child; F. except when a
guardian of the
child's estate or a
guardian or attorney ad litem has been appointed for the
child, the right to act as an agent
of the
child in relation to the
child's estate if the
child's action is required by a state, the United States, or a foreign government; G. the duty to manage the estate
of the
child to the extent the estate has been created by community property or the
joint property
of the parents.
A mediator who never interviews the parties separately or a
guardian ad litem who conducts only
joint interviews with a
child's parents can not expect to hear the abused partner's account
of abuse in the relationship.
LIZNOTES TABLE
OF CONTENTS Child Abuse and Domestic Violence; Stalking Child Custody; Joint Custody; Shared Parenting; Time - share Collaborative Law; Cooperative Law; Mediation Gestational Surrogacy, IVF, Exploitation of Reproduction Guardians ad Litem; Parenting Coordinators; Custody Evaluators; Supervised Visitation OUTRAGES, Family Court Issues; Activism; Corruption Father's Rights Movement Mother's Rights: Maternity, Paternity, and Pregnancy Issues Parental Alienation Syndrome; Hostile - aggressive Parenting; Enmeshment Psychology in Family Court; Forensic Psychology; Therapeutic Jurisprudence Relocation; Post-divorce Move - aways (inc
OF CONTENTS
Child Abuse and Domestic Violence; Stalking
Child Custody;
Joint Custody; Shared Parenting; Time - share Collaborative Law; Cooperative Law; Mediation Gestational Surrogacy, IVF, Exploitation
of Reproduction Guardians ad Litem; Parenting Coordinators; Custody Evaluators; Supervised Visitation OUTRAGES, Family Court Issues; Activism; Corruption Father's Rights Movement Mother's Rights: Maternity, Paternity, and Pregnancy Issues Parental Alienation Syndrome; Hostile - aggressive Parenting; Enmeshment Psychology in Family Court; Forensic Psychology; Therapeutic Jurisprudence Relocation; Post-divorce Move - aways (inc
of Reproduction
Guardians ad Litem; Parenting Coordinators; Custody Evaluators; Supervised Visitation OUTRAGES, Family Court Issues; Activism; Corruption Father's Rights Movement Mother's Rights: Maternity, Paternity, and Pregnancy Issues Parental Alienation Syndrome; Hostile - aggressive Parenting; Enmeshment Psychology in Family Court; Forensic Psychology; Therapeutic Jurisprudence Relocation; Post-divorce Move - aways (incl.
family law,
child custody, physical custody,
joint custody, legal custody, custodian,
guardian, parental duties, parenting, parents,
children, sole custody, monitor, best interest
of children, parenting plan, schedule.
Married parents
of a
child are
joint guardians and have equal rights in relation to the
child.
Child Custody; joint custody; shared parenting; time - share Child custody issues are interconnected with issues of maternity and pregnancy, primary caregiving, parental alienation, child development (education and attachment issues), father's rights, and other family law issues, as well as to issues involving forensic psychologists, guardians ad litem (GALs) and other mental health professionals in the family court system, so check related sections, including those on psychology for other relevant arti
Child Custody;
joint custody; shared parenting; time - share
Child custody issues are interconnected with issues of maternity and pregnancy, primary caregiving, parental alienation, child development (education and attachment issues), father's rights, and other family law issues, as well as to issues involving forensic psychologists, guardians ad litem (GALs) and other mental health professionals in the family court system, so check related sections, including those on psychology for other relevant arti
Child custody issues are interconnected with issues
of maternity and pregnancy, primary caregiving, parental alienation,
child development (education and attachment issues), father's rights, and other family law issues, as well as to issues involving forensic psychologists, guardians ad litem (GALs) and other mental health professionals in the family court system, so check related sections, including those on psychology for other relevant arti
child development (education and attachment issues), father's rights, and other family law issues, as well as to issues involving forensic psychologists,
guardians ad litem (GALs) and other mental health professionals in the family court system, so check related sections, including those on psychology for other relevant articles.
458:17 (II)(b)(1992)(stating that a court may appoint a
guardian ad litem to represent the interests
of a
child to assist the court in determining whether a
joint legal custody award is appropriate); N.J. Stat.
Schwartz proposes the appointment
of a
guardian ad litem as a family mediator that can protect the interests
of the
children, promote the objectives
of joint custody, and provide the courts with a means
of evaluating
joint custody awards.
Only a handful
of jurisdictions call for a court to appoint a
guardian ad litem for the minor
child in their
joint custody statutes.