Perhaps they should have thought of that before they started in blushed and giggling behind the bushes.Won't the baby carry some stigma in his/her religious family for being a bastard? Some regions still have bullying problems for that sorta thing.
Perhaps they should have thought of that before they started in blushed and giggling behind the bushes.Won't the baby carry some stigma in his/her religious family for being a bastard? Some regions still have bullying problems for that sorta thing.
In many of cases like this one, there are tendencies for the penniless and immature (and totally bogan - redneck) father-to-be to bug out to the other side of the country (i.e. another state), or out of the country all together, specifically to hide and avoid his parental responsibilities.The law in your country really hates illegitimate kids I see, or does it just hate fathers who aren't married?
Not so. We are talking about under-aged parents here, not adults. Once they are adults, the legal situation here is mostly the same as the USA, as you describe.Except that only children of married people get two parents. In the US all children have a right to support from both parents, and parents both have equal rights over the child.
Won't the baby carry some stigma in his/her religious family for being a bastard? Some regions still have bullying problems for that sorta thing.
The law in your country really hates illegitimate kids I see, or does it just hate fathers who aren't married?
How does her martial status impact her abilities to raise kids?
Except that only children of married people get two parents. In the US all children have a right to support from both parents, and parents both have equal rights over the child.
Your question piqued my interest how this really works in Holland. It's more complicated than I even thought.The law in your country really hates illegitimate kids I see, or does it just hate fathers who aren't married?
Interestingly, this only holds for married couples; not in case of a civil union or a (notarized) cohabitation contract.No it doesn't, AFAIK. But when a married couple gets a kid, the parents are recognized as the parents, period.
A father may recognize a kid only with consent of the mother. Unless the parents have a civil union, that's not the end of the story. He may be recognized as the father, but that doesn't mean he has all parental rights and responsibilities - e.g., he may not yet act as the legal guardian for the kid. For that, the parents have to jointly file a petition with the court.When an unwed mother gets a kid, the father has to recognize the child to be registered as the father. I guess the mother may object to the father recognizing the child, but I'm not sure.
But wouldn't the father first have to be recognised as the father?
Interestingly, this only holds for married couples; not in case of a civil union or a (notarized) cohabitation contract.
A father may recognize a kid only with consent of the mother. Unless the parents have a civil union, that's not the end of the story. He may be recognized as the father, but that doesn't mean he has all parental rights and responsibilities - e.g., he may not yet act as the legal guardian for the kid. For that, the parents have to jointly file a petition with the court.
Except that only children of married people get two parents. In the US all children have a right to support from both parents, and parents both have equal rights over the child.
The presumption is that the husband of the mother is the father of the child. Of course, either party can contest that in court.What about cases of infidelity?
How does that work then? Anyone who thinks he's the father can go to the OB/GYN and ask to be registered as the father in the birth certificate? What when three claimants turn up? I guess the US also has a maximum of 2 parents per child?Ah this is very different, a mother in the US can not remove a fathers rights in the US. In theory in many states fathers need to consent to putting kids up for adoption.
Seems not much in this respect. We are world leader, though, in assigning kids to the mother in a divorce case.So it seems that there is a strong bias against fathers in Holland.
Why is this a news story? I mean, the laws say they can't get married until a certain age. They applied to get an exception granted and were denied. How by any stretch of the imagination is this worthy of press?
I mean, it's a neat thing to post on JREF, because it sparked an interesting discussion regarding the law itself that they are subject to.
But how did this ever make the news?
How does that work then? Anyone who thinks he's the father can go to the OB/GYN and ask to be registered as the father in the birth certificate? What when three claimants turn up? I guess the US also has a maximum of 2 parents per child?![]()
One could equally ask, it's only a few months, so why the urgency to do it now?
What difference does waiting a few months make if it is a stable, committed relationship?
How is waiting making anything worse?