Academic literature on the topic 'Heterosexual partnership'

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Journal articles on the topic "Heterosexual partnership"

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Lindblade, K., B. Foxman, and J. S. Koopman. "Heterosexual Partnership Characteristics of University Women." International Journal of STD & AIDS 5, no. 1 (January 1994): 37–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/095646249400500109.

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In order to assess the individual risk of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), both characteristics of the partnership and the individual should be considered. Partnership characteristics have been used as risk markers for STD transmission but their distribution has not been well described. Using a self-administered questionnaire, we collected information on the partnership characteristics of the 4 most recent sexual partners of the members of 9 university women's social organizations at the University of Michigan. Respondents were asked to report the setting of the first meeting of partners, the length of the presexual relationship, condom use at the first sexual encounter and the total number of sexual encounters within that partnership. We graphically analyse changes in these partnership characteristics with respect to partnership order. As the number of sexual partners increased the women in this population were more likely to report partnership characteristics associated with an increased risk of acquiring an STD. In addition, partnership characteristics varied with the order of the partnership, implying that no single partnership is representative of all others.
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Doan, Long, Annalise Loehr, and Lisa R. Miller. "Formal Rights and Informal Privileges for Same-Sex Couples." American Sociological Review 79, no. 6 (November 19, 2014): 1172–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0003122414555886.

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Attitudes toward gay rights have liberalized over the past few decades, but scholars know less about the extent to which individuals in the United States exhibit subtle forms of prejudice toward lesbians and gays. To help address this issue, we offer a conceptualization of formal rights and informal privileges. Using original data from a nationally representative survey experiment, we examine whether people distinguish between formal rights (e.g., partnership benefits) and informal privileges (e.g., public displays of affection) in their attitudes toward same-sex couples. Results show that heterosexuals are as willing to extend formal rights to same-sex couples as they are to unmarried heterosexual couples. However, they are less willing to grant informal privileges. Lesbians and gays are more willing to extend formal rights to same-sex couples, but they too are sometimes more supportive of informal privileges for heterosexual couples. We also find that heterosexuals’ attitudes toward marriage more closely align with their attitudes toward informal privileges than formal rights, whereas lesbians and gays view marriage similarly to both formal rights and informal privileges. Our findings highlight the need to examine multiple dimensions of sexual prejudice to help understand how informal types of prejudice persist as minority groups receive formal rights.
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Aicken, Catherine RH, Sonali Wayal, Paula Blomquist, Stella Fabiane, Makeda Gerressu, Gwenda Hughes, and Catherine H. Mercer. "Ethnic variations in sexual partnerships and mixing, and their association with STI diagnosis: findings from a cross-sectional biobehavioural survey of attendees of sexual health clinics across England." Sexually Transmitted Infections 96, no. 4 (August 17, 2019): 283–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-2018-053739.

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ObjectivesEthnic differences in partnership types and sexual mixing patterns may contribute to elevated STI diagnosis rates among England’s Black Caribbean (BC) population. We examined the differences between BC and White British/Irish (WBI) sexual health clinic (SHC) attendees’ reported partnerships and sexual mixing, and whether these differences could explain ethnic inequalities in STI, focusing on attendees reporting only opposite-sex partners (past year).MethodsWe surveyed attendees at 16 SHCs across England (May to September 2016), and linked their survey responses to routinely collected data on diagnoses of bacterial STI or trichomoniasis ±6 weeks of clinic attendance (‘acute STI’). Behaviourally-heterosexual BC and WBI attendees (n=1790) reported details about their ≤3 most recent opposite-sex partners (past 3 months, n=2503). We compared BC and WBI attendees’ reported partnerships and mixing, in gender-stratified analyses, and used multivariable logistic regression to examine whether they independently explained differences in acute STI.ResultsWe observed differences by ethnic group. BC women’s partnerships were more likely than WBI women’s partnerships to involve age-mixing (≥5 years age difference; 31.6% vs 25.5% partnerships, p=0.013); BC men’s partnerships were more often ‘uncommitted regular’ (35.4% vs 20.7%) and less often casual (38.5% vs 53.1%) than WBI men’s partnerships (p<0.001). Acute STI was higher among BC women than WBI women (OR: 2.29, 95% CI 1.24 to 4.21), with no difference among men. This difference was unaffected by partnerships and mixing: BC women compared with WBI women adjusted OR: 2.31 (95% CI 1.30 to 4.09) after adjusting for age and partner numbers; 2.15 (95% CI 1.07 to 4.31) after additionally adjusting for age-mixing, ethnic-mixing and recent partnership type(s).ConclusionWe found that differences in sexual partnerships and mixing do not appear to explain elevated risk of acute STI diagnosis among behaviourally-heterosexual BC women SHC attendees, but this may reflect the measures used. Better characterisation of ‘high transmission networks’ is needed, to improve our understanding of influences beyond the individual level, as part of endeavours to reduce population-level STI transmission.
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Crookston, Shara. ""Hot-for-Teacher"." Girlhood Studies 13, no. 1 (March 1, 2020): 101–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ghs.2020.130108.

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In this article I explore the highly problematic but wildly acclaimed romantic relationship between Aria Montgomery, a high school junior, and her English teacher Ezra Fitz in the television series Pretty Little Liars. This partnership normalizes gendered power imbalances often common to heterosexual partnerships, yet fervent fans have supported the duo enthusiastically, dubbing the couple #Ezria in blogs and social media. As we know, much research shows that along with unintended pregnancy, young girls who are victims of child sexual abuse by adult males suffer from depression. These outcomes are not shown in Pretty Little Liars: the series ends with Aria marrying her teacher in an example of a happily-ever- after ending, thereby reinforcing postfeminist ideas that Aria’s self-efficacy has never been compromised. I argue that in the era of #Metoo, the exploration of power in heterosexual romantic relationships on television shows aimed at adolescent girl audiences is a site for critical analysis.
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Tu, Yangjun, Yaguang Chen, Yi Guo, Zhi Yang, and Xin Jiang. "Interpersonal Trust and Self-Perception of Heterosexual Charm Moderate Potential for Betraying One's Romantic Partner." Social Behavior and Personality: an international journal 43, no. 6 (July 17, 2015): 909–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.2224/sbp.2015.43.6.909.

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We examined whether or not interpersonal trust and self-perception of one's heterosexual charm moderated the potential to betray one's romantic partner. To enable free expression, we asked college students (N = 271) to imagine the possibility of a relationship breakup occurring between couples described in 4 vignettes. The results showed that the men believed that couples were more likely to break up when the woman in the partnership experienced a dramatic change for the worse in her physical appearance, but the women thought that couples were more likely to break up when the man in the partnership experienced a dramatic worsening of his economic status. Interpersonal trust and self-perception of heterosexual charm more strongly affected the perception of the male participants that a couple would break up when there was a change for the worse in the physical appearance of the woman partner, and these 2 factors also strongly affected the perception of the female participants that a couple would break up when there was a dramatic worsening of the economic status of the man in the partnership.
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Kostić, Svetislav. "The consitutional obligation of an identical tax treatment of marriage, common law partnerships and same-sex partnerships in the Republic of Serbia." Pravni zapisi 13, no. 1 (2022): 212–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/pravzap0-37467.

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In this paper the author focuses on the question of the tax treatment of same-sex partnerships in comparison to the treatment provided for heterosexual marriages and common law partnerships (extramarital unions) in the Serbian law. Namely, different treatment of certain social phenomena can represent a prohibited form of discrimination only under the condition that we show that the observed phenomena are comparable, precisely from the view point of the object of protection provided by the prohibition of discrimination. The problem we face is that our understanding of certain phenomena has changed over time, as best illustrated by the fact that Aristotle, who introduced the concept of discrimination, would have found it difficult to understand the postulate that all people are equal in their rights and obligations before the law. The author starts from the premise that the tax treatment of same-sex partnerships should be viewed through the perspective of the principle of equality in tax law, the principle contained in Article 91, para. 2 of the Serbian Constitution, which stipulates that the obligation to pay taxes and other duties shall be general and based on the economic power of taxpayers. Therefore, if a same-sex union contains the same aspects that affect the economic power of taxpayers, aspects that exist in the case of heterosexual marriage and extramarital union, then the Serbian Constitution requires us to provide it with equal tax treatment resulting from living in a heterosexual partnership. In this way the author opens up the space for a critical review of the tax norms in the 2021 Draft Law on Same-Sex Partnerships, i.e. for proposing solutions that would enable easier, and above all more sustainable key goal the law aspires to, which is to eliminate discrimination of the same-sex partnerships in the Serbian legal system.
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Richards, J. E., J. M. Risser, P. M. Padgett, H. U. Rehman, M. L. Wolverton, and R. R. Arafat. "Condom use among high-risk heterosexual women with concurrent sexual partnerships, Houston, Texas, USA." International Journal of STD & AIDS 19, no. 11 (November 2008): 768–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/ijsa.2008.008076.

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Concurrent sexual partnerships allow for enhanced transmission of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Condom use dynamics in this context may be an important factor for transmission of HIV. We conducted a cross-sectional study to describe the frequency of concurrency among high-risk heterosexual women in Houston, Texas and determine the factors associated with condom use. A total of 553 participants were recruited using respondent-driven sampling and completed an anonymous questionnaire; 256 (49%) were identified as having a concurrent partnership. The prevalence of condom use at last sexual encounter was 26%. Women were significantly more likely to use condoms if their sexual encounter was with a casual partner and if alcohol and/or drugs were not used. The high prevalence of concurrent partnerships suggests the presence of a dense sexual network which may enable the rapid spread of STIs and HIV. The risk of transmission may be additionally increased due to the low prevalence of condom use.
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Kovaček Stanić, Gordana. "Marriage and Partnership in Serbian Family Law : Legal Consequences." Law, Identity and Values 1, no. 1 (2021): 71–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.55073/2021.1.71-84.

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In this paper the author analyses the family law consequences of family law unions in Serbia. Two types of family law unions are regulated: marriage and heterosexual non-marital cohabitation. Same-sex union is not regulated at present, but the draft law is under preparation. The author analyses consequences of: personal relations, property relations, nuptial contract, family home, maintenance and exercise of parental rights.
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Smith, Bradley Shaun, and JA Robbie Robinson. "An Embarrassment of Riches or a Profusion of Confusion An Evaluation of the Continued Existence of the Civil Union Act of 2006 in the Light of Prospective Domestic Partnerships Legislation in South Africa." Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal/Potchefstroomse Elektroniese Regsblad 13, no. 2 (June 15, 2017): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2010/v13i2a2640.

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As it stands, South African family law currently holds that the Marriage Act 25 of 1961 applies exclusively to the solemnisation of heterosexual civil marriages while same-sex couples have no choice but to formalise their relationships in terms of the Civil Union Act 17 of 2006. In addition, the legal position is complicated by the fact that the latter Act not only allows both heterosexual and homosexual couples to conclude a civil union, but also provides that a civil union may take the form of either a marriage or a civil partnership, both of which enjoy the same legal recognition as, and give rise to the same legal consequences, as a civil marriage under the Marriage Act. In January 2008, a draft Domestic Partnerships Bill saw the light of day, the potential enactment of which casts significant doubt as to whether the prevailing framework should be retained. With this potential development in mind, this paper considers the desirability of maintaining the "separate but equal" status quo by: (a) comparing the South African Law Reform Commission's pre-Civil Union Act proposals with the approach eventually adopted by the legislature; (b) comparing and contrasting the post-Civil Union Act position in South Africa with that of an established and well-ordered jurisdiction such as the Netherlands and, in the light hereof, considering the cases for and against repealing the Civil Union Act; and (c) by considering the desirability and practicality of the civil partnership's potential co-existence with the Domestic Partnerships Bill (as modified in accordance with a recent study). A proposal is made that could provide a less complex and better streamlined family law dispensation in South Africa.
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Pail, Christa. "Austrian Constitutional Court Somewhere under the Rainbow: Marriage Equality and the Role of the Austrian Constitutional Court." ICL Journal 12, no. 2 (June 26, 2018): 225–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/icl-2018-0026.

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Abstract In 2010, Austria introduced the Registered Partnership as the only form of legal recognition for same-sex couples while marriage is limited to heterosexual couples. In a recent judgment, the Austrian Constitutional Court decided this limitation to be unconstitutional. Due to numerous legal changes in the last years, the legal framework governing registered partnerships and marriage became nearly identical. By upholding different terms for the same kind of relationship, same-sex partners are presented unequal to different-sex couples and forced to show their sexual orientation even in situations where sexual orientation should be irrelevant. This puts them at risk of discrimination. The Court considers this as a violation of the principle of equality.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Heterosexual partnership"

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Ogbozor, Edith Nkechinyere. "HIV-Positive Status Disclosure Barriers in Stable Heterosexual Partners in Warri, Nigeria." ScholarWorks, 2016. https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/2371.

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Nondisclosure of positive status drives the secondary transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. This cross sectional quantitative survey study grounded by the consequence theory evaluates fear of stigma, lack of social support, and level of HIV-related knowledge as barriers to self-disclosure of HIV-positive status to stable heterosexual partners. A sample of 303 HIV-infected respondents (111 men and 192 women) accessing antiretroviral therapy at 4 designated centers in Warri, Nigeria, completed the self-administered questionnaires. Logistic regression analysis was used to assess the association between these factors and spousal HIV-positive status disclosure. Results demonstrated: (a) social support availability significantly predicted HIV status disclosure (OR = 1.038, CI = 1.022, 1.053, p = .000); (b) no significant correlation between high scores on HIV knowledge scale and HIV status disclosure (OR = .992, CI =.921, 1.067, p = .822); and (c) high stigma scale scores significantly predicted disclosure of HIV status in an inverse association (OR =.982, CI = .968, .997, p = .020). Independent t test analysis demonstrated that the gender difference in disclosure rates (females, 67.7%; males, 64.9%) was statistically nonsignificant at t (301) = -504, .614, p > .05. Multivariate analyses found marital status, length of relationship, knowledge of partners HIV status, and duration of HIV diagnosis as disclosure predictors. This study, which established a disclosure rate of 66.7%, and a discordance rate of 40.9%, may promote timely HIV-positive status disclosure and prevent secondary HIV transmission at the local level, resulting in the control of HIV epidemic at a global level.
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Loops, Sharon Denise. "Heterosexual cohabitation in South Africa, against the background of developments in the law of marriage and marriage alternatives." Thesis, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11394/3195.

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Manthwa, Tshepo Aubrey. "Recognition of domestic partnerships in South African law." Diss., 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20073.

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With the advent of a new constitutional dispensation in South Africa, intimate relationships that were not formally recognised, such as customary marriages, became fully recognised through designated legislation. Domestic partnerships are, however, afforded only limited recognition despite compelling reasons that lead people to domestic partnerships. Domestic partners are also discriminated against based on marital status despite a Constitution that forbids discrimination based on equality, human dignity and marital status. The object of this study is to investigate whether there are sufficient grounds to afford domestic partnerships full recognition similar to that granted to civil marriage. This study includes arguments in favour and against the recognition of domestic partnerships and a discussion of the reasons that lead people into domestic partnerships. There will also be an analysis of the draft Domestic Partnership Bill 36 of 2008 to determine the suitability of the draft Bill to regulate domestic partnerships. This investigation is conducted with reference to relevant draft Bills, legislation, and case law.
Private Law
LLM
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Williams, Ronel Anneli. "Maintenance of the surviving spouse in South Africa : the challenges faced by the executor." Thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/26961.

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The Maintenance of Surviving Spouses Act 27 of 1990 came into operation thirty years ago and has remained relatively unchanged since its promulgation. The stated objective of the Act is to provide the surviving spouse with a claim for maintenance against the estate of the deceased spouse in certain circumstances. This objective is sound, as it is evident from an analysis of the history of our law that legislation was needed to address the financial position of a survivor following the death of his or her spouse. The practical application of the Act is, however, not as robust as it does not always achieve the stated objective and often leads to unintended consequences. This research has a dual objective. The first aim is to analyse the practical considerations when an executor applies the Act and to consider the challenges the executor must deal with when considering a maintenance claim under the Act. The second aim is to investigate possible solutions to these challenges and to consider whether there are viable alternative arrangements for the way in which a maintenance claim under the Act is handled. The purpose of the study is to formulate a comprehensive recommendation for legislative reform of the Act so that the practical application of the Act achieves a result that reflects the objective of the Act.
Private Law
LL.D.
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Dauphinais, Chloé. "Jeunes amours aux âges avancés : exploration de la mise en couple chez les sexagénaires." Thèse, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/21341.

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Books on the topic "Heterosexual partnership"

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Bosse, Joanna. Bringing Coherence to the Sensuous Life. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039010.003.0006.

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This chapter explores the nature of partnership and connection in ballroom dance as well as the convention of leading and following. In particular, it explains how ballroom dance provides an opportunity to bring coherence to the sensuous life, a coherence that is tested by the contradictory expectations placed upon Regent dancers as middle-class, heterosexual men and women in twenty-first-century America. The chapter first describes how men and women relate to one another on and off the dance floor before discussing the “princess factor” in ballroom dance. It also considers the rhetorical and performative strategies used by dancers to reconfigure ballroom's conventional role in constructing gender and heterosexual normativity in movement and sound. It shows that dancers actively engage problematic and antiquated aspects of beauty and resignify them with contemporary sensibilities about equity and connection. It argues that performance enables dancers to create a discrete and singular, if not coherent, experience through which they wrestle with the incoherent, inconsistent reality of gender.
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De Witte, Kristof, Oliver Holz, and Lotte Geunis, eds. Somewhere over the rainbow. Discussions on homosexuality in education across Europe. Waxmann Verlag GmbH, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31244/9783830987475.

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Schools should offer a safe and secure environment for all young people to develop, to learn, and to thrive. Sadly, for many, they fall short. Homophobic and transphobic behaviour is still painfully common in schools across Europe. A significant number of LGBT pupils experience homophobic and transphobic bullying, and they are more likely to experience violence than heterosexual peers. This publication explores the underlying attitudes towards homosexuality in eight European countries: Belgium, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Spain, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Turkey. It is the product of a strategic partnership (KA2) between fifteen European secondary and higher education institutions, launched in 2016 under the auspices of the European Commisson’s ERASMUS+ programme. The project supported by this partnership, Homo’poly, promotes greater understanding and acceptance of homosexuality with the explicit aim of improving the school life of LGB pupils.
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Acosta, Katie L. Queer Stepfamilies. NYU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479800957.001.0001.

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This work examines the social and legal experiences of lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer stepparent families. The data come from fifty-one interviews with origin and/or stepparents from forty-three different families formed after a heterosexual or same-sex relationship dissolved. Study families lived in eighteen states, with most residing in the South. Respondents became parents in a variety of ways. While the stepparents became parents through their romantic partnerships, the origin parents had a wider range of experiences. Some origin parents became parents as teenagers or in their early twenties within heterosexual relationships or nonromantic encounters that led to pregnancy. Others became parents later in life while in a heterosexual marriage. Still others became parents within a same-sex relationship (through birth or adoption). Regardless of their various paths to parenthood, the respondents share the experience of raising in a same-sex family children who were conceived or adopted in a different family structure. In most study families, the parents raising these children engage in various degrees of plural parenting. Queer Stepfamilies is about the complex dynamics that influence parenting under these circumstances and highlights the ingenious ways respondents make their families work. In this book Acosta asks: How do lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer stepparent families forge a path toward plural parenting? How do state family laws shape the respondent families’ parent-child relationships? Are lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer stepparent families formed after a heterosexual relationship dissolved different from those formed after a same-sex relationship dissolved?
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Heenan, Susan, and Anna Heenan. Family Law Concentrate. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198854968.001.0001.

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Each Concentrate revision guide is packed with essential information, key cases, revision tips, exam Q&As, and more. Concentrates show you what to expect in a law exam, what examiners are looking for, and how to achieve extra marks. Family Law Concentrate is supported by extensive online resources to take your learning further. It has been written by experts and covers all the key topics so that you can approach your exams with confidence. The clear, succinct coverage enables you to quickly grasp the fundamental principles of this area of law and helps you to succeed in exams. This guide has been rigorously reviewed and is endorsed by students and lecturers for level of coverage, accuracy, and exam advice. It is clear, concise, and easy to use, helping you get the most out of your revision. After an introduction, the book covers: families, civil partnerships, and cohabitation; nullity; divorce, dissolution, and judicial separation; domestic abuse; financial provision on divorce or dissolution; Children—private law; Children—public law; adoption; and child abduction. This, the fifth edition, has been fully updated in light of recent developments in the law, including the extension of civil partnerships to heterosexual couples, the Law Commission reviews of the law of surrogacy and marriage and proposals to reform the law of divorce and domestic abuse.
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Lowe, Nigel, Gillian Douglas, Emma Hitchings, and Rachel Taylor. Bromley's Family Law. 12th ed. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198806691.001.0001.

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Bromley’s Family Law has an enduring reputation as the definitive text on the subject. Its hallmark qualities of clarity, authority, comprehensiveness and readability have been relied upon by generations of readers. The text presents a broad treatment of the key issues relating to adult and child law. Each chapter provides an up-to-date critical discussion of the current legislative and case law position (including European Court of Human Rights’ decisions), proposals for reform and issues of current concern. Particular attention is also paid to the increasingly significant international dimension of family law, with a new chapter on this area covering the 1996 Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and reflecting the UK’s departure from the EU. This edition has been updated to provide up-to-date coverage on heterosexual civil partnerships, religious marriage (non)-recognition, the 2020 Domestic Abuse Bill, forced marriage protection orders, female genital mutilation protection orders, stalking protection orders, the Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act 2020, online divorce, transgender parenthood, surrogacy, parental orders, child arrangement orders, radicalisation, and voluminous case law across all topics.
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Book chapters on the topic "Heterosexual partnership"

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Szalma, Ivett. "Conditions for ART Participation: Heterosexual Partnership a Must." In essentials, 21–26. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-35628-6_5.

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Weeks, Jeffrey, Brian Heaphy, and Catherine Donovan. "Partnership Rites: Commitment and Ritual in Non-Heterosexual Relationships." In Relating Intimacies, 43–63. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-27683-7_3.

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Lord Hall, Joan. "Homoerotic Desire and Same-Sex Bonding: Challenges to Heterosexual Partnership?" In Sexual Desire and Romantic Love in Shakespeare, 181–215. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474488563.003.0008.

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Chapter 7 discusses how far homoerotic same-sex relationships and close friendships (male and female) challenge heterosexual norms of romance. Shakespeare’s Sonnets, which explore bisexual passion, privilege love for the ‘fair youth’ above lust for the ‘dark’ mistress. In Shakespeare’s theatre the transvestite convention of a boy actor playing a girl (who then pretends to be a boy) generates same-sex desire, as when Orsino in Twelfth Night is attracted to Viola dressed as Cesario. The chapter also shows how extreme devotion to a close male friend, the case with Antonio in The Merchant of Venice and Antonio in Twelfth Night, excludes these characters from the comic resolution of marriage. Meanwhile male friendship partly trumps heterosexual romantic attachment in The Two Gentlemen of Verona and The Two Noble Kinsmen, whereas strong bonds between females (Celia for Rosalind in As You Like It) only temporarily disrupt the progress toward traditional marriage.
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Mladenović, Tamara. "SKANDINAVSKI MODEL PRAVNOG UREĐENjA REGISTROVANOG PARTNERSTVA." In USKLAĐIVANjE pravnog sistema Srbije sa standardima Evropske unije. [Knj. 10], 575. University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Law, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/upssx.575m.

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The obligation to recognize and regulate same-sex unions in Serbia is an international obligation that the country has to follow, arising from the established practice of the European Court of Human Rights. In the draft version of the Law on Same-Sex Unions prepared by the Ministry of Human and Minority Rights of the Republic of Serbia, it is proposed to introduce a registered partnership as a new form of partnership. At the same time, the creators of the aforementioned draft of the Law accept the Scandinavian model of regulating registered partnership created exclusively as a union of persons of the same sex, for the conclusion of which certain formal conditions are required. This is a dualistic approach, according to which marriage belongs to heterosexual couples, while registered partnership is only granted to persons of the same sex. However, the experience of the Scandinavian countries indicates that the registered partnership model represents only a temporary phase until the conclusion of same-sex marriages is enabled. The mentioned phase is not, nor could it be, short-lived, since legislative changes expanding the rights of same-sex couples are taking place gradually. In the paper, the author analyzes the mentioned model and points out its basic advantages and disadvantages.
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Kwan, SanSan. "Talking." In Love Dances, 32–49. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197514559.003.0002.

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This first chapter of Love Dances explores the ethics and politics of intercultural dance via a piece that draws on the modality of speech over that of movement. The chapter sets the stage for the other works examined in the book, all of which combine talking and dancing. It also places Pichet Klunchun and Myself within a longer history of intercultural dance and theater, reminding readers of the continuing context of Orientalism. As a duet between a white, European, heterosexual, cis-male, avant-garde choreographer and a Thai, heterosexual, cis-male, khon dancer, the work reproduces some of the more hackneyed patterns of Orientalist encounter, in contrast to the more complex not-exactly-East-not-exactly-West collaborations studied later in the book. As such, the piece provides a backdrop against which the other pieces may be understood. Finally, this chapter notes the ways that the cross-cultural and the aesthetic dynamics of this particular partnership tell us something about the pitfalls of intercultural collaboration, as well as the pedagogical potentials.
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Tweneboah, Seth. "Moral Panic, Social Exclusion, and the Human Rights of Same-Sex Partners in Ghana." In Global LGBTQ+ Concerns in a Contemporary World, 156–77. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-5568-5.ch008.

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At the core of this chapter is a thematic analysis of media portrayal of same-sex partnership in the Ghanaian public sphere. The chapter ponders how media products affect societal framing and (mis)understanding of homosexual identity and activities. It interrogates the function the Ghanaian media plays in the framing of same-sex activities and the notion (misperception) people have about same-sex partners. The chapter thus situates the exclusion of same-sex partners within the context of mediatization of their sexual lifestyles. What appears as stigmatized and discriminative treatment as well as social exclusion of same-sex partners, the chapter contends, is partly a result of the fear that same-sex lifestyles will lead to the destruction of heterosexual relationship and the eventual disintegration of society.
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"HETEROSEXUAL POPULATIONS WITH PARTNERSHIPS." In Stochastic Processes in Epidemiology, 545–680. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812779250_0012.

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Bierhoff, Hans Werner. "Heterosexual partnerships: Initiation, maintenance, and disengagement." In The Diversity of Human Relationships, 173–96. Cambridge University Press, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511586552.009.

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Adeagbo, Olwufemi. "Interracial gay partnerships in post-apartheid South Africa: The ‘journey’ of a heterosexual researcher." In Queer Kinship, 190–98. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429198403-18.

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Taylor, Stephen, and Astra Emir. "17. Sex-related characteristics (gender reassignment, marital status, pregnancy, sexual orientation)." In Employment Law, 289–301. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198806752.003.0017.

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Abstract:
This chapter discusses the law on discrimination due to the protected characteristics of gender reassignment, marital status and civil partnership, and pregnancy and maternity. The Sex Discrimination Act as originally drafted only prohibited discrimination on grounds of sex and marital status. However, civil partners are now treated in the same way as married people. Transgender people, who live as someone of the opposite gender, are protected from discrimination. They can also change their birth certificates so that their new gender is reflected there. Pregnant women have a right not to be discriminated against, and this is a free-standing right. People are entitled not to be discriminated against because of their sexual orientation. The prohibition against sex discrimination covers heterosexuals as well as homosexual people.
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Conference papers on the topic "Heterosexual partnership"

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McKinnon, Graham, Ruth Beesley, and Lucille Weir. "O06 That’s a lot of Primary Syphilis! How local identification of an increase in primary syphilis cases amongst heterosexual males resulted in a targeted system wide response including outreach to vulnerable street sex workers by the Wildflowers project; a primary care GP/CGL (Change Grow Live charity) partnership." In BASHH 2022 Abstracts. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-bashh-2022.6.

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