Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Africa Children and Informal Justice Systems in Africa
- Africa The Law and the Protection of the Family in Sentencing Primary Caregivers of Children: Practice from a Few African Countries
- Albania Cross-Border Disputes over Child Custody and Access Rights and the ECtHR Jurisprudence in the Case of Albania
- Australia Greater Recognition of Adults as Individuals?
- Belgium Belgian Family Law Anno 2018
- Brazil The Necessary Subordination of the Interests and Commitment of Adults in the Construction of a Preventive Public Policy to Reduce the Sexual Vulnerability of Children in Brazil
- Canada Efforts to Address Intimate Partner Abuse and High-Conflict Custody Disputes in Canada
- China A Survey on the Intestate Succession Views and Relevant Habits of Private Entrepreneurs in Contemporary China and its Legislative Implications
- China Child Sexual Assault in China and Preventive Education
- England and Wales To Procreate, or Not, That is the Question
- Germany Law Reforms in Abundance
- Hong Kong Cutting Our ‘Children's’ Coats According to Our Cloth: Hong Kong Family Mediation Regarding Children's Arrangements in the Context of Culture and Law
- India Family Privacy in India
- Ireland Sheltering the Homemaker in Irish Family Law: Ireland's Failure to Evolve with the Shifting Social and Family Norms
- Italy Robots for the Family: Protection of Personal Data and Civil Liability
- Japan The Japanese Supreme Court should Promote Family Law Reform More Drastically
- Korea Recent Development in Korean Family Law: Best Interests of the Child, End-of-Life and Sexual Minorities
- Myanmar Marriage under Myanmar Customary Law
- New Zealand A Review of Relationship Property and the Māori Way of Life in Parenting Disputes: Changes Afoot
- Norway The Strengthening of Fathers’ Rights in Norwegian Child Law and Other Recent Reforms
- Papua New Guinea Child Welfare and Protection Law Reform in Papua New Guinea: A Critique
- Poland Supporting Elderly Persons in Polish Family and Succession Law
- Portugal Chronicle of a Legal Reform Foretold: The Shape of the Law to Come Regarding Incompetent Adults in Portugal
- Serbia The Case of ‘Missing Babies’ in Serbia before the European Court of Human Rights
- Singapore The Evolution of the Singapore Family Justice Courts: A Journey to Serve Families and Children Responsibly
- South Africa The Implications of Varying Statutory Minimum Age Thresholds for Child Consent in Respect of Minors Granted Majority Status Through Civil Marriage in South Africa
- Sweden, Norway and the USA Regulations of and Remedies for Corporal Punishment Against Children
- Index
Ireland Sheltering the Homemaker in Irish Family Law: Ireland's Failure to Evolve with the Shifting Social and Family Norms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2019
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Africa Children and Informal Justice Systems in Africa
- Africa The Law and the Protection of the Family in Sentencing Primary Caregivers of Children: Practice from a Few African Countries
- Albania Cross-Border Disputes over Child Custody and Access Rights and the ECtHR Jurisprudence in the Case of Albania
- Australia Greater Recognition of Adults as Individuals?
- Belgium Belgian Family Law Anno 2018
- Brazil The Necessary Subordination of the Interests and Commitment of Adults in the Construction of a Preventive Public Policy to Reduce the Sexual Vulnerability of Children in Brazil
- Canada Efforts to Address Intimate Partner Abuse and High-Conflict Custody Disputes in Canada
- China A Survey on the Intestate Succession Views and Relevant Habits of Private Entrepreneurs in Contemporary China and its Legislative Implications
- China Child Sexual Assault in China and Preventive Education
- England and Wales To Procreate, or Not, That is the Question
- Germany Law Reforms in Abundance
- Hong Kong Cutting Our ‘Children's’ Coats According to Our Cloth: Hong Kong Family Mediation Regarding Children's Arrangements in the Context of Culture and Law
- India Family Privacy in India
- Ireland Sheltering the Homemaker in Irish Family Law: Ireland's Failure to Evolve with the Shifting Social and Family Norms
- Italy Robots for the Family: Protection of Personal Data and Civil Liability
- Japan The Japanese Supreme Court should Promote Family Law Reform More Drastically
- Korea Recent Development in Korean Family Law: Best Interests of the Child, End-of-Life and Sexual Minorities
- Myanmar Marriage under Myanmar Customary Law
- New Zealand A Review of Relationship Property and the Māori Way of Life in Parenting Disputes: Changes Afoot
- Norway The Strengthening of Fathers’ Rights in Norwegian Child Law and Other Recent Reforms
- Papua New Guinea Child Welfare and Protection Law Reform in Papua New Guinea: A Critique
- Poland Supporting Elderly Persons in Polish Family and Succession Law
- Portugal Chronicle of a Legal Reform Foretold: The Shape of the Law to Come Regarding Incompetent Adults in Portugal
- Serbia The Case of ‘Missing Babies’ in Serbia before the European Court of Human Rights
- Singapore The Evolution of the Singapore Family Justice Courts: A Journey to Serve Families and Children Responsibly
- South Africa The Implications of Varying Statutory Minimum Age Thresholds for Child Consent in Respect of Minors Granted Majority Status Through Civil Marriage in South Africa
- Sweden, Norway and the USA Regulations of and Remedies for Corporal Punishment Against Children
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Family law in Ireland is premised upon absolute respect for the marital family. The family is accorded an elevated status in the Irish Constitution, where it is expressly regarded as a unit that is superior to all positive law with inalienable and imprescriptible rights. This marital union is founded upon the express constitutional preference for the wife and mother to remain in the family home to fulfil her duties to the family as a whole. Article 41.2.1 of the Irish Constitution critically outlined below, obliges the state to take the steps necessary to ensure that no woman is forced through economic necessity to work outside the home. The normative importance of the married family in Irish society simply cannot be overstated, and this absolute preference for the family unit founded upon marriage has in turn hugely influenced the state's approach to regulating marriage breakdown. Whilst facilitating the remedy of divorce, the state has retained this protectionist approach and has enacted a statutory framework which normalises life-long interdependence, placing such financial obligations on the breadwinner (former) spouse, making it impermissible to seek or secure individual financial freedom. As a means of influencing social policy and directing individual behaviour and choice, Irish lawmakers have elected to permanently protect the homemaker rather than mandate any expectation of, or right to post-divorce independence.
In creating the necessary legal framework which operates to dissolve the union, lawmakers have resolutely maintained this marital fiction by refusing to permit any scenario where spouses can be deemed to have definitively severed their financial ties, thereby insulating the position of the homemaker, irrespective of the individual financial circumstances of the former spouses. These deep rooted inter-spousal obligations exist to incentivise marital commitment and serve to ensure the imposition of entitlements should the parties divorce. This community, lifetime-based, view of financial obligations maintains an expectation of inter-spousal responsibilities post-divorce, creating a marital union that is not necessarily binding, but a financial commitment that is. The heterogeneous nature of modern Irish family life mandates that Irish family law move away from its long held aspiration of a family based on heterosexual marriage with idealised gender-specific roles.
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- International Survey of Family Law 2018 , pp. 271 - 296Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2018