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Law and Policy in Modern Family Finance: Property Division in the 21st Century [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 420 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x160 mm, weight: 900 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Dec-2017
  • Leidėjas: Intersentia Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780684649
  • ISBN-13: 9781780684642
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 420 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x160 mm, weight: 900 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 27-Dec-2017
  • Leidėjas: Intersentia Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1780684649
  • ISBN-13: 9781780684642
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Law and Policy in Modern Family Finance - Property Division in the 21st Century adopts a conceptual approach to address key questions about the legal division of property when a marriage, civil union, de facto relationship, or other close personal relationship ends. These questions include: which relationships should be subject to a statutory regime; which property should be shared; whether property held on trust should be included; how property should be shared; how economic disparity caused by the division of functions within the relationship should be addressed, if at all; whether, and if so to what extent, the interests of children of the relationship should be considered; whether parties should be allowed to contract out of a statutory regime and, if so, whether such contracts should be binding; and whether death should be treated in the same way as relationship break-down.The authors use New Zealand's current legislative framework as a basis for critical analysis and reflection. Despite New Zealand's Property (Relationships) Act 1976 being hailed as socially progressive legislation when it was enacted, there is concern in New Zealand that its property sharing regime no longer meets society's needs and expectations. However, issues of fairness, equality, and modern complexities in the division of relationship property are not unique to New Zealand. Other jurisdictions are facing similar problems, including Australia, England and some continental European countries.The inclusion of internationally recognised relationship property experts from England, Australia and Germany ensures the utility of the book for international audiences, making it of interest to law reformers, academics, the judiciary, the legal profession, and law students everywhere in the world.
Foreword v
Acknowledgements vii
Table of Cases
xv
List of Contributors
xxv
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(10)
Nicola Peart
Jessica Palmer
Margaret Briggs
PART I WHO SHOULD BE COVERED BY A PROPERTY SHARING REGIME?
With an introduction
11(4)
Margaret Briggs
Chapter 2 Reconsidering Family Property Law in the Post-Marital Age
15(22)
Patrick Parkinson
1 Introduction
15(1)
2 The Emergence of the Post-Marital Age
16(2)
3 Family Law -- Rethinking Foundational Concepts
18(1)
4 Exploring the Issues through Stories
19(13)
5 Revisiting the Marriage Analogy
32(3)
6 Conclusion
35(2)
Chapter 3 Which Relationships Should be Included in a Property Sharing Scheme?
37(28)
Margaret Briggs
1 Introduction
38(1)
2 Relationship Formalisation as the Marker of Financial Entitlement
39(4)
3 Relationship Functionality as the Marker of Financial Entitlement
43(14)
4 Looking Forward
57(5)
5 Conclusion
62(3)
Chapter 4 Children's Interests in Division of Property on Relationship Breakdown
65(30)
Nicola Peart
Mark Henaghan
1 Introduction
65(2)
2 Historical Overview
67(5)
3 Current Law in England and Australia
72(6)
4 Current Law in New Zealand
78(13)
5 Options for Reform
91(4)
Chapter 5 Family Finances on Death of a Spouse or Partner
95(30)
Nicola Peart
1 Introduction
95(3)
2 Rights of Surviving Spouses to the Present Day
98(21)
3 The Way Forward
119(3)
4 Conclusion
122(3)
Chapter 6 A Lament for `Testator's Family Maintenance' -- A Good Idea Gone Wrong? Australian Reflections
125(24)
Rosalind Croucher
1 The Post-Mortem Question
125(2)
2 The Context of Testamentary Freedom
127(6)
3 Australian Family Provision Laws
133(2)
4 Reflections and Reform
135(14)
PART II WHAT PROPERTY SHOULD BE COVERED BY A PROPERTY SHARING REGIME?
With an introduction
149(4)
Jessica Palmer
Chapter 7 Classifying Relationship Property - A Radical Re-Shaping?
153(24)
Bill Atkin
1 Introduction
154(2)
2 Principles
156(4)
3 The Classification Spectrum
160(5)
4 Which Model?
165(4)
5 Micro Issues
169(6)
6 Radical Reclassification
175(2)
Chapter 8 What to Do about Trusts?
177(26)
Jessica Palmer
1 Introduction
177(1)
2 The Nature of the Discretionary Trust and its Modern Use
178(2)
3 Solutions from within the Common Law
180(11)
4 The Case for Legislative Intervention
191(1)
5 The Content of Legislative Intervention
192(9)
6 The Best Method?
201(2)
Chapter 9 Should Indigenous Property be Relationship Property?
203(26)
Jacinta Ruru
Leo Watson
1 Introduction
203(2)
2 A Legal History of Maori Land and Treasured Property
205(5)
3 Exclusion of Maori Property from Relationship Property
210(8)
4 The Particularly Perplexing Issue - The Family Home
218(5)
5 A Way Forward
223(4)
6 Conclusion
227(2)
Chapter 10 Valuation of Relationship Property: An Evaluation of Practice and Procedure
229(28)
Simon Jefferson
Paul Moriarty
1 Introduction
230(1)
2 The Relevance of Value
230(3)
3 Value Defined
233(6)
4 Evidence of Value -- The Expert Witness
239(9)
5 Is Establishing a Value an Exercise of Discretion?
248(1)
6 Valuation Factors
249(6)
7 Conclusion
255(2)
PART III HOW SHOULD PROPERTY BE SHARED AT THE END OF A RELATIONSHIP?
With an introduction
257(4)
Nicola Peart
Chapter 11 Should the Regime be Discretionary or Rules-Based?
261(32)
Joanna Miles
1 Introduction
262(3)
2 Rules `versus' Discretion -- The Basics
265(6)
3 Some Key Contemporary Concerns for the Rules/Discretion Debate
271(7)
4 Different Jurisdictions, Different Journeys
278(11)
5 Where Next for New Zealand -- `O, Canada!'?
289(4)
Chapter 12 Sharing Family Finances at the End of a Relationship
293(36)
Mark Henaghan
1 Introduction
294(1)
2 The Purposes of Dividing Family Finances
294(3)
3 A Historical Analysis of the Division of Family Finances
297(9)
4 The Current New Zealand Position
306(2)
5 Exceptions to the Partnership Principle of Equal Sharing
308(14)
6 The Consequences of the Disparity Provision
322(1)
7 Where to from Here?
323(4)
8 Conclusion
327(2)
Chapter 13 Should a Property Sharing Regime be Mandatory or Optional?
329(28)
Robert Fisher
1 Introduction
330(1)
2 Rationales for Redistributing Assets on Separation
330(1)
3 Causation-Based Property Division
331(2)
4 Compensation for Disparity in Earning Capacity
333(1)
5 Spousal Support Obligations
334(2)
6 Relationship between the Three Rationales for Redistributing Assets on Separation
336(1)
7 The Normal Limits of Property Sharing
337(1)
8 Is the Family Home a Special Case?
337(3)
9 The Philosophical Approach to Property Acquired for Common Use or Benefit
340(1)
10 The Philosophical Approach to Tracing Capital
340(3)
11 What Went Wrong in New Zealand?
343(5)
12 A Suggested Regime for New Zealand
348(2)
13 Would an Enlightened Statutory Regime Make Contracting Out Redundant?
350(4)
14 Conclusions
354(3)
Chapter 14 Contracting Out of the Default Relationship Property Regime -- Comparative Observations
357(36)
Jens M. Scherpe
1 Introduction -- The Core of Relationship Recognition Law
358(1)
2 Terminology and Focus of this
Chapter
358(2)
3 Problems when Comparing Matrimonial Property Regimes and the Full Financial Consequences of Divorce/Relationship Dissolution
360(1)
4 Default Matrimonial Property Regimes/Financial Consequences of Divorce -- In a Nutshell
361(20)
5 Contracting Out -- Marital Agreements
381(10)
6 Conclusion -- Matrimonial Property, Marital Agreements, and the Core of Marriage Law
391(2)
Chapter 15 Maintenance -- Time for a Clean Break?
393(22)
John Caldwell
1 Clean Break under the Family Proceedings Act?
397(4)
2 Relationship Property and Maintenance Connection
401(2)
3 Economic Disparity Awards and Maintenance
403(3)
4 A Potential Difficulty with a Clean Break -- Children
406(3)
5 Interim Maintenance
409(1)
6 Future Directions
410(5)
Index 415