Although most people know who their parents are, there is a
minority that does not. This book deals with the rights of persons,
both children and adults, who feel a strong yearning to find out
about their biological parents. The identification of biological
parents may become important in a wide variety of situations, which
run the gamut from adoption to sperm donor anonymity and
'misattributed paternity.' Individual searches across such
situations may be motivated by a variety of legal, emotional, and
medical reasons. Thanks to bio-medical developments, as well as an
increased emphasis on identity rights in international human rights
treaties, a broad consensus, that a fundamental right to know one's
origins exists, can now be attested. Nonetheless, legal solutions,
especially outside the adoption context, have so far largely
remained piecemeal. Attention has been drawn primarily to the
informational needs of adopted children. As such, manifold legal
questions remain regarding the appropriate age for disclosure of
information to children, the use of compulsion in DNA testing, not
to mention the conflicting rights of a child's need to know vs.
parental privacy. In exploring this wide range of legal issues, a
thorough comparative study of the relevant law across a number of
European jurisdictions has now, for the first time, been made
available in English. Foundational Facts, Relative Truths not only
provides an in-depth overview of the most recent legal developments
in France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Portugal, but it also
includes references to some interesting legal solutions found in
other jurisdictions. In addition, this study renders similarities
and differences visible between the approach of the United Nations'
Children's Rights Convention and the ever expanding case law of the
European Court on Human Rights. In providing insight into the
relevant interpretive tools, this book proposes a set of legal
principles that guide the assessment of the current strength of the
right to know one's genetic origins. Moving beyond a comprehensive
legal theory of the right to know, Foundational Facts, Relative
Truths explores the concrete possibilities for a more effective
regulation. In this way, it casts a fresh light on the boundaries
of State regulation while looking critically at the role parents
have in making genetic information accessible to children. (Richard
Blauwhoff has been awarded two academic awards for this book Mr.
Blauwhoff has received an Erasmus Research Prize in recognition of
an exceptional PhD dissertation by a young academic researcher in
the field of humanities and social sciences. In addition, he has
received the Dutch-German Lawyers Prize, which is awarded
biannually to a dissertation or paper on a topic of European law.)
General
| Imprint: |
Intersentia Publishers
|
| Country of origin: |
Belgium |
| Series: |
European Family Law, 25 |
| Release date: |
May 2009 |
| First published: |
May 2009 |
| Authors: |
Richard J. Blauwhoff
|
| Dimensions: |
240 x 160 x 28mm (L x W x T) |
| Format: |
Paperback - Sewn
|
| Pages: |
462 |
| ISBN-13: |
978-90-5095-913-1 |
| Categories: |
Books >
Law >
General
Promotions
|
| LSN: |
90-5095-913-X |
| Barcode: |
9789050959131 |
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