Academic literature on the topic 'Marriage breakdown'

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Journal articles on the topic "Marriage breakdown"

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Jimenez-Cabello, Jose. "Disolución Matrimonial: la Ruptura de Matrimonios del mismo Sexo en Andalucía." Anduli, no. 21 (2022): 123–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.12795/anduli.2022.i21.06.

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Tras diversos intentos de regulación de los matrimonios de personas del mismo por parte de algunas comunidades autónomas, la Ley 13/2005 supuso el reconocimiento de este tipo de uniones. La misma situó a España como uno de los países pioneros en reconocer este tipo de matrimonios. Este texto aborda la evolución de los divorcios de matrimonios compuestos por personas del mismo sexo, y diversos aspectos destacados, en uno de los territorios donde más enlaces se producen: Andalucía. El método empleado es cuantitativo, aplicando un análisis descriptivo mediante la utilización de la Estadística de Nulidades, Separaciones y Divorcios (ENSD, 2012-2018). Las principales conclusiones extraídas son que los divorcios de este tipo de matrimonios han ido aumentando de forma paulatina a lo largo del periodo analizado. La mayoría de estos divorcios se caracterizan por ser consensuados. Los matrimonios tienen, en su mayoría, una duración de 5 años o más y están compuestos esencialmente por cónyuges de nacionalidad española. Por último, dos tercios de los divorcios ocurren en parejas sin hijos menores.
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Sansom, Di, and Douglas Farnill. "Stress Following Marriage Breakdown." Journal of Divorce & Remarriage 26, no. 3-4 (July 28, 1997): 39–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j087v26n03_03.

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Hewitt, Belinda, Janeen Baxter, and Mark Western. "Marriage breakdown in Australia." Journal of Sociology 41, no. 2 (June 2005): 163–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1440783305053235.

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Biondi, G., and E. Perrotti. "Marriage trends in the Italo-Greeks of Italy." Journal of Biosocial Science 23, no. 2 (April 1991): 129–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021932000019167.

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SummaryThe Italo-Greek ethnolinguistic minority, living in thirteen villages of southern Italy, marry largely amongst themselves but there are some intermarriages with native Italians. The majority of marriages are within the villages, but there is some marriage movement from one Italo-Greek village to another. Data on marriage and birthplace of parents and grandparents obtained by questionnaires to families of primary school children (aged 6–13 years) are analysed, to show the trends in breakdown of isolation over the last two generations.
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Rana, Sobia, Faiza Latif, and Ayaz Ahmad Aryan. "IMPURITY AND MARRIAGES: A READER RESPONSE STUDY OF AN AMERICAN MARRIAGE." Pakistan Journal of Social Research 04, no. 03 (September 30, 2022): 726–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.52567/pjsr.v4i03.762.

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Every society's basic concerns revolve around marriage, which call for both mental and physical coordination to ensure a long-lasting chain of relationships. Responsible actions and a good outlook enable people to participate in society and make marriage effective in many ways. Couples' deliberate behavior and pervasive social phenomena are to blame for the disruption in marital matters. An American Marriage (2018) by Tayari Jones is the subject of the current study, which explores marital problems. Reader-Response Theory (RRT) by Rosenblatt (1978) and Fish (2000) is used for the textual analysis of the novel to determine the marital concerns highlighted in the narrative. RRT bases its interpretation of the texts on the reader's experiences, goals, attitude, and preexisting theologies. RRT expands the text's essential elements by manipulating new meanings that are not contained in the text. The study's main goals are to identify the social vices, behaviors, and ambitions of the characters that fall victim to problems and have an impact on the marriage features depicted in the book. The methodology used to manipulate the objectives is qualitative and descriptive in nature. The study's findings indicate that while male members of marriages frequently leave responsible and constructive behavior in favour of sexual lust and freedom of action, this leads to the breakdown of marriages. The findings also demonstrate that women have stronger intentions than men to preserve the marital union since women's gender demands "protection and loyalty," which are typically not met by male members, leading to the breakdown of the union. Keywords: Freedom, Marriage, Pleasure, Responsibilities.
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Clulow, Christopher. "Preventing marriage breakdown: Towards a new paradigm." Sexual and Marital Therapy 11, no. 4 (November 1996): 343–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02674659608404448.

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O’Gorman, Francis. "Trollope,Orley Farm, and Dickens’s Marriage Breakdown." English Studies 99, no. 6 (August 18, 2018): 624–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0013838x.2018.1492228.

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Kumar Yadav, Raj, Madhu Bala, Priyanka Chaudhary, Paramveer Singh, Aarushi Mittal, Mohd Kaif, Akanksha Verma, and Mukesh Kumar Dudi. "Social bearing of laws and their implementation with reference to irretrievable breakdown of marriage: A comparative study of laws in India and Asian countries." F1000Research 12 (August 1, 2023): 921. http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.133515.1.

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This research study explores the scope of introducing ‘irretrievable breakdown’ as a ground for divorce. Many developed countries have successfully introduced this ground and even removed the time limit with the passage of time for seeking a unilateral divorce. Some societies insist that if this ground is introduced, the number of divorces will increase, but it is not so. In India, a more than 10-years separation may be adopted as grounds for divorce to resolve this concern. This time period may be decreased if neither spouse has a child. The court can decide whether the marriage is ended. This is a comparative study of the laws on marriage in India and other Asian countries and their social effects. In this study, the researchers found that marriage was indissoluble in many countries a few decades ago and is now dissoluble. This paper discusses the concept of divorce and how it came into India with changes in social structure. The paper discusses the introduction of irretrievable breakdown as a ground for divorce in India. It explains the current situation of Asian countries with historical background to support the claim of this ground. Overburdened courts are not expected to look into the personal matter of the parties to the marriage. If parties to the marriage can live happily, they should choose to live peacefully, or amicable solutions can be found with their peer groups. If there is a deadlock, the parties to the marriage must restart their lives. There are certain precautions to remove the possibility of misuse of new grounds of divorce, e.g. ensuring a child's future, declaring the marriage dead by the court and not by the estranged spouses. Media can also play an essential role in saving marriages.
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Mukono, Macharia. "Divorce Law in Kenya: In Support of a Uniform No-Fault Regime." Strathmore Law Review 7, no. 1 (October 13, 2022): 161–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.52907/slr.v7i1.195.

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In 2014, Kenya enacted the Marriage Act to amend and consolidate various laws on marriage and divorce. Among the amendments introduced was the irretrievable breakdown ground of divorce alongside more traditional fault-based grounds. The court in CWL v HN noted that the introduction of this ground had effectively done away with the need for petitioners to provide evidence of matrimonial fault in divorce proceedings. Despite this, the Act still maintains traditional fault grounds for divorce not only as independent grounds but also as factors to be considered when determining whether a marriage has irretrievably broken down. The author contends that this retention of fault-based requirements reflects an outdated position and contradicts the thinking behind the introduction of irretrievable breakdown as a divorce ground. This study, therefore, proposes adopting a uniform no-fault divorce system premised on irretrievable breakdown. To better align this system with the dual objective of protecting individual dignity while also safeguarding the dignity and sanctity of marriage, the study proposes a model that includes a mandatory requirement to attempt reconciliation before petitioning for divorce.
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Graycar, Regina. "Matrimonial Property Law Reform and Equality for Women: Discourses in discord." Victoria University of Wellington Law Review 25, no. 1 (February 1, 1995): 9–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.26686/vuwlr.v25i1.6223.

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This article scrutinises some of the underlying concepts which have structured law reform debates about matrimonial property and describes findings about the economic consequences of marriage breakdown for women and children. It evaluates aspects of matrimonial property law by reference to debates about the meaning of equality for women and suggests that any successful matrimonial property law reform must move beyond the rhetoric of formal equality in redressing the economic disadvantage currently experienced by women and children after marriage breakdown.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Marriage breakdown"

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Thomson, Andrea. "Marriage and marriage breakdown in late twentieth-century Scotland." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2014. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/5764/.

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Focussing on Scotland, this thesis adds a new perspective to the existing discussion surrounding marriage and marriage breakdown in the late twentieth century. It is the lived reality of marriage and marriage breakdown which is a key focus, using oral history and a range of contemporary and archival source materials. Whilst a renewed discursive emphasis on the 'companionate marriage' in the immediate post-war period is evident, in line with the social reconstruction ethos of the period, there existed alongside such enthusiasm a number of alternative, and often conflicting, contemporary discourses. With significant implications for marriage and family relations, sociologists and historians identify a further profound discursive shift as occurring during the 1970s, emphasising the increased availability of contraception, the emergence of second-wave feminism in Britain and landmark equality legislation as crucial factors intertwined with this. Perceived advances in terms of both mainstream ideology and legislation, including, for example, a revived feminist consciousness and the 1976 Divorce (Scotland) Act, did not influence marriage in a discursive vacuum but instead are likely to have integrated and competed not only with generic ideals regarding appropriate gender roles but also embedded local patterns of gender relations. Oral history is a particularly appropriate methodology with which to address this topic as it permits an otherwise unattainable insight into the experience of day-to-day life. Additional source materials drawn on include parliamentary, ecclesiastical and sociological commentary.
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O'Neill, Katherine. "Accounts of marriage breakdown : a discourse analytic study /." Title page, table of contents and summary only, 1995. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09ARPS/09arpso58.pdf.

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Nevill, Marjorie. "Women and marriage breakdown in England, 1832-1857." Thesis, University of Essex, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.236462.

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Bailey, Joanne. "Breaking the conjugal vows : marriage and marriage breakdown in the north of England, 1660-1800." Thesis, Durham University, 1999. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/1470/.

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Buckley, Timothy Joseph. "What is binding? An examination of the bond of marriage in face of the pastoral crisis of broken marriages in the Catholic Church in England and Wales." Thesis, Heythrop College (University of London), 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.363007.

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Hasson, Ezra. "The construction of policy in the context of divorce and relationship breakdown." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 2002. http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11298/.

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In January of 2001 the Government announced its intention to repeal Part 11 of the Family Law Act 1996. Originally scheduled for implementation in 2000, the Act had provided for fundamental changes to English divorce law, including removing matrimonial 'fault' from the divorce process, and encouraging mediation as the preferred method of dispute resolution. The Family Law Act began life as a set of recommendations intended primarily to bring marriages to an end with minimum hostility and distress. Yet what emerged from the policy 'process' was a piece of legislation that explicitly declared its support for marriage, and which imposed a framework of mechanisms designed to encourage couples to stay together. The first 'phase' of this thesis examines how the Act, with its dual aims of supporting and ending marriage, was reached. Initially the history of divorce law is traced. Through a series of interviews conducted with individuals involved in the Family Law Act 'process', the achievement of this 'middle-way' is then explored in detail. The second 'phase', drawing on a series of interviews conducted with individuals working with families on the ground, subsequently goes on to examine the 'street-level' response to marriage and relationship breakdown. Whilst national policy is something of a compromise between idealism and pragmatism, for those at street-level their work is unambiguously pragmatic - policy is constructed primarily in terms of a non-judgemental 'service' catering to the diversity of the modern family experience. The apparent success of this approach, particularly when compared to the 'failure' of the Family Law Act, prompts the question of whether there are lessons to be learnt for national policy. Indeed the study suggests that a new mind-set and approach akin to that operating on the ground is also needed at national level, if workable divorce law reform is to be achieved.
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Nicholson, Lynda. "Picking up the pieces : (re)framing the problem of marriage breakdown in the British Armed Forces." Thesis, Loughborough University, 2010. https://dspace.lboro.ac.uk/2134/6343.

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This thesis examines the issue of marriage breakdown in the British Armed Forces in light of claims that rates are double that of the civilian population. The research is situated within the context of existing research on the relationship between the service family and the military organisation. This thesis is distinctive in that it employs Bacchi's (1999) method of critical analysis to problem framing in Governmental policy and existing discourses on service families. The objective is to show how the impact of military demands on marriage and family life are framed by the media, politicians, and academics as a problem for the military, in relation to a tension that exists between retention and divorce. Attention to the effects of service life on families is therefore embedded in policy directives, and framed by concerns over the retention and recruitment of military personnel as implications for operational effectiveness. By re-focusing attention to the implications of marriage breakdown for service families this thesis constructs new problem frames, a key question being: what is problematic about marriage and marital breakdown for military wives? The empirical areas explored through in-depth qualitative interviews with a sample of ex-service wives from across the tri-Services are women s experiences and perceptions of marriage and family life, and of marriage breakdown in the military. This methodological approach is unique in that previous studies of service wives have focused on a single community. The voices and experiences of ex-service wives are noticeably absent in previous research, representing neglected routes to experience and knowledge that are vital to a more holistic understanding of the impact of military demands on the family. This thesis highlights the role of emotion in the socialisation of service families which has not been made in the existing literature to date. It has been acknowledged that the conceptual boundaries between the public and private spheres are practically non-existent where the military and service families are concerned. The interface between work and home can be explained in terms of the invisible emotion work service wives perform in support of husbands careers and the institutional goals of the military. This thesis is also distinctive in that it defines wives work in relation to the military in terms of emotional labour and the two-person career. As wives receive little recompense for this labour, responding to role appropriate emotions can have implications for the well-being of military wives, and illustrates the complex picture that emerges as to the reasons why military marriages might end. Factors linked to issues of marital adversity were: infidelity, domestic violence and emotional and psychological abuse, the effects of a culture of alcohol, and the impact of post-operational stress. In addition, family separation was viewed as creating emotional distance between couples. Many women became very independent and adept at coping with the military lifestyle, which created problems for the reintegration of personnel into family life. Moreover, husbands that were perceived by women to be married to the military, in terms of an institutional and social identity, were less satisfied with their relationships. This thesis concludes that the construct of the service family is embedded in institutional rules and regulations regarding marriage and family life, therefore current problematisations of marriage breakdown fail to reveal the difficulties experienced by families in navigating post-divorce family life. Non-intact families are rendered operationally ineffective, hence there are a number of consequences experienced by service families, and women and children in particular, that represent a far-reaching problem of marriage breakdown in the UK Armed Forces.
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Efe, Chinedu Justin. "Rethinking the property rights of spouses on civil marriage breakdown in Nigeria : inspiration from other countries." Thesis, University of Pretoria, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/64642.

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This thesis establishes that the redistribution of “matrimonial property” upon civil marriage breakdown is alien to Nigerian Family Law. A complete separation of property system operates in Nigeria. Comparatively, the thesis determines the suitability of some legal precepts existing in Australia, England and South Africa and how they could be employed in Nigeria. While Australia, England and South Africa have progressed with the tides and dynamism of the society, Nigerian law has remained unresponsive to the plight of spouses (especially female spouses) who are mostly financially disadvantaged on marriage breakdown. A default matrimonial property system, which is akin to the accrual system in South Africa, is proposed. The proposed matrimonial property system will preserve the independence and equality of spouses during marriage and upon its breakdown. A case is made for the recognition and enforcement of marital property agreements which will aid spouses in deciding how the financial and property aspects of their marriage will be regulated. The thesis, however, supports the recognition of the redistribution power of the courts, notwithstanding the matrimonial property system in operation. The courts’ discretion, in this regard, must be exercised sparingly, only when the justice of each case demands it. The need to give sufficient weight and valuable considerations to the indirect contributions of a homemaker and caregiver vis-à-vis the contributions of the breadwinner is advanced. The thesis takes the standpoint that concepts of equity and trust could play a vital role in the determination of the property rights of spouses on civil marriage breakdown. It concludes that there is a need to develop and improve the present legal framework on the property rights of spouses on civil marriage breakdown in Nigeria.
Thesis (LLD)--University of Pretoria, 2017.
Centre for Human Rights
LLD
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Usman, Hamidu Bagwan. "The consequences of family breakdown in post-independence Nigeria : a case study of Borno state." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1989. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/36686/.

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This is a study of the social and legal consequences of family breakdown in Nigeria as a whole but with specific reference to Borno State. It examines the effects of family breakdown on the husband and wife or wives and their children under the General Laws, Customary Law and Islamic Law of the people of Maidugurij Biu, and Gwoza areas of Borno State. The study covers the post-Independence period-i. e from 1960 to today. The aim of the study is to show how the social and economic changes in society affect the family at divorce. Although social change is part of any society, this study shows that the formal law on family breakdown and its consequences have not kept pace with social change, and that the dichotomy between state law and customary or Islamic law on family breakdown exists only in court. Thus the authority of the extended family, and within it, the dominance of men over womens, has not been specifically disturbed by the increasing Westernisation and rural-urban migration that has taken place since Independence. It is under this situation that the rights of women, property settlement on divorce, maintenances, and custody of children, as the main indicators of the consequences of family breakdown in any society has to be gauged. The role of the law and the state is also discussed. We argue that all the post-Colonial governments in the Federation were responsible for the present deplorable condition of victims of family breakdown not only in Borno State but throughout the country. Thus there has been no state-provided Social welfare to cater for deserted wivest children, and destitutes despite the ever increasing needs of such persons in a society that is rapidly changing. It is within this context that the effect of family breakdown on the people of Borno State is examined. The study argues that the various state authorities in Nigeria tend to abandon their responsibility to the family to the traditional customary institutions, such as the extended familyf which are now incapable of meeting the needs of victims of family breakdown. Moreoveri, the traditional family based economic system does not help women on divorce because it is predicated on the traditional power structure within the home which is in favour of men. on divorce, women are invariably left high and dry# and with few alternatives than to return home to their parents or other extended family members for support.
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Virdi, Manprit Kaur. "Marriage/breakdown amongst Punjabi-Sikhs in Canada : a legal ethnography of disputants, (un)official forums, and access to family justice in Ontario, Canada." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2017. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/24907/.

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This doctoral thesis examines Punjabi-Sikhs, a transnational diaspora community, to consider the extent to which Canadian multicultural accommodation extends into the realm of Ontario family law and struggles with ethnic diversity. The findings of this thesis aim to prove the practical relevance of such research and it hopes to establish an interest in future projects on the access to justice needs of ethnic minorities. Marriage and marriage breakdown being the chosen site of analysis, the objective is to map the dispute processes parties employ, navigating between official and unofficial forums and actors. 'Law as process' literature is employed, including legal pluralism and dispute settlement studies, to examine the dynamic process of mitigating marriage breakdown within and outside of the official law. This thesis demonstrates that kinship-oriented Punjabi-Sikh transmigrants approach the official family law assuming that their justiciable issues can be upheld, whereas official law actors, guided by the liberal, secular and individual framework of Ontario family law, struggle to adequately comprehend and/or resolve such disputes. While some navigational factors, such as the presence of physical violence entail necessary legal intervention to secure individual human rights, others involve the instrumental use of the law to punish or manipulate the other spouse. Within the unofficial sphere, this thesis establishes that Punjabi-Sikh disputants resort to a variety of kinship and Sikhi-focused forums and actors before, in parallel and after family law proceedings. It is established that the multiple framework approach of Punjabi-Sikh disputants means that the official and unofficial spheres are utilised simultaneously to address marriage breakdown. For this legal ethnography, a mixed methodology approach is adopted, consisting of legal casework, coding, critical discourse analysis, and semi-structured interviews. The primary fieldwork data comprises both family law cases and interviews with married, separated and divorced Punjabi-Sikhs in the Greater Toronto Area of Ontario, Canada.
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Books on the topic "Marriage breakdown"

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Gailey, Stephen. Pensions in marriage breakdown. Birmingham: CLT Professional Publishing, 1996.

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Brodie, David. Tolley's taxation of marriage and marriage breakdown. Croydon: Tolley, 1988.

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White, Peter. Tax planning on marriage breakdown. 4th ed. London: Longman, 1986.

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Watts, Garry. Super splitting on marriage breakdown. North Ryde, N.S.W: CCH Australia, 2002.

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Moore, David. Some tax implications of marriage breakdown. Belfast: SLS Legal Publications, 1987.

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Columbia, Law Reform Commission of British. Division of pensions on marriage breakdown. Vancouver, B.C: The Commission, 1990.

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David, Moore. Some tax implications of marriage breakdown. Belfast: SLS Publications, 1987.

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Priestley, Chris. The financial aspects of marriage breakdown. Central Milton Keynes: Accountancy Books, 1995.

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Columbia, Law Reform Commission of British. Report on property rights on marriage breakdown. Vancouver, B.C: The Commission, 1990.

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E, Scully Paula, ed. Marriage breakdown in Ireland: Law and practice. Dublin: Butterworth, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Marriage breakdown"

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Mothersole, Brenda, and Ann Ridley. "Marriage and the breakdown of marriage." In A-Level Law in Action, 391–411. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13044-3_25.

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Pinion, F. B. "Religious Commitment and Marriage Breakdown." In A T. S. Eliot Companion, 27–42. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-07449-5_3.

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Howlin, Niamh, Kevin Costello, and Mary O’Dowd. "Marriage Breakdown in Ireland, c. 1660–1857." In Law and the Family in Ireland, 1800–1950, 7–23. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-60636-5_2.

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Howlin, Niamh, Kevin Costello, and Deirdre McGowan. "Class, Criminality and Marriage Breakdown in Post-Independence Ireland." In Law and the Family in Ireland, 1800–1950, 125–41. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-60636-5_8.

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Qureshi, Kaveri. "Estrangements, Separations and Yoyo Marriages." In Marital Breakdown among British Asians, 127–51. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-57047-5_5.

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"Marriage and marriage breakdown." In Private Violence and Public Policy, 52–64. Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315562100-12.

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Barclay, Katie, Jeffrey Meek, and Andrea Thomson. "Marriage and emotion in historical context." In Courtship, Marriage and Marriage Breakdown, 1–16. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367824228-1.

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Simmons, Christina. "‘He isn’t affectionate at all’." In Courtship, Marriage and Marriage Breakdown, 144–59. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367824228-10.

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Langhamer, Claire. "Trust, authenticity and bigamy in twentieth-century England." In Courtship, Marriage and Marriage Breakdown, 160–74. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367824228-11.

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Meek, Jeffrey. "‘It seemed the right thing to do!’." In Courtship, Marriage and Marriage Breakdown, 175–90. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367824228-12.

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Reports on the topic "Marriage breakdown"

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Fisher, Hayley, and Hamish Low. Financial implications of relationship breakdown: does marriage matter? Institute for Fiscal Studies, October 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1920/wp.ifs.2012.1217.

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