Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Divorce in the United States Essay -- Divorce Marriage Relationships E
Divorce in the United States           Divorce involves the recognition that a marriage has hopelessly failed  and that at least one of the partners has no desire to continue the marital  relationship. Divorce legally dissolves a marriage, and permits the partners to  remarry if they choose. Divorce differs from an annulment, which declares a  marriage invalid because of some flaw in the contract.         The early American settlers brought with them three different views on  divorce: 1) the Roman Catholic view that marriage was a sacrament and that  there could be no divorce; 2) the English view that divorce was a legislative  matter; and 3) the Protestant view that marriage and divorce were secular  matters to be handled by the civil authorities.         The Constitution of the United States did nothing to limit the rights of  the states to enact their own laws governing marriage and divorce. Despite  several efforts to amend the Constitution, to allow Congress to pass federal  legislation on divorce, to this day the states retain separate laws. Because  divorce laws vary from state to state, the "migratory divorce" developed:  couples would move temporarily to a state where divorce was easier to obtain  than at home. For example, a couple living in New York State, where until 1967  the only grounds for divorce was adultery, would establish residence in Nevada -  - a procedure that took only 6 weeks -- and file for divorce on grounds of  mental cruelty.         Popular attitudes toward divorce changed as the United States became  more urbanized and less religious. The increasing acceptance of divorce was  reflected in court interpretations of existing laws and in new legislation  enacted by the states. Two tendencies merged, making possible the establishment  of new and easier grounds for divorce. The focus of state divorce, which  previously concerned itself with specifying legal grounds for divorce, shifted  to criteria concerning the breakdown of the marital relationship. This could be  seen in conditions that allowed divorce for alcoholism, drug addiction, or  nonsupport. Another tendency permitted divorce if both parties gave of  voluntarily separating and living apart for a specified period of time. For  example, in 1967, New York allowed divorce for couples who had been legally  separated for 2 years, eliminating the search for a guilty party. In 19...              ...lo parenting, and stepfamilies /  Genevieve Clapp.         PUBL.:     New York : Wiley,         FORMAT:     xv, 377 p. ; 23 cm.         DATE:      1992    Myers, M. F., Men and Divorce (1989);         AUTHOR:     Myers, Michael F.         TITLE:     Men and divorce / Michael F. Myers.         PUBL.:     New York : Guilford Press,         FORMAT:     xv, 286 p. ; 24 cm.         DATE:     1989    Splinter, John P., The Complete Divorce Recovery Handbook (1992);         AUTHOR:     Splinter, John P.         TITLE:     The complete divorce recovery handbook : grief, stress,            guilt, children, co-dependence, self-esteem, dating, remarriage/            John P. Splinter.         PUBL.:     Grand Rapids, Mich. : Zondervan,         FORMAT:     p. cm.         DATE:     1992    Walzac, Yvette, and Burns, Sheila, Children and Divorce (1984).         AUTHOR:     Teyber, Edward.         TITLE:     Helping children cope with divorce / Edward Teyber.         EDITION:     1st pbk. ed.         PUBL.:     New York : Lexington Books ; Toronto : Maxwell Macmillan            Canada;     New York : Maxwell Macmillan International,         FORMAT:     ix, 221 p. ; 24 cm.         DATE:     1994                         
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