Civil partnership: your questions answered [Report]
Material type: TextPublication details: Dublin Ireland Department of Education and Science 2009 Description: Pbk .: 132 pISBN: C1251Subject(s): Civil partnership | Law | Gay and lesbian | RightsDDC classification: 346.015 RYA Online resources: Overview of the bill | Web version of the questions and answers Summary: The Civil Partnership Bill published by the Government in June will provide civil partners with equivalent rights and obligations to married couples across a range of areas including registration, maintenance and financial support, pensions, taxation, social welfare, succession, protection in equality legislation, immigration, residential tenancies and protection of the shared home. The Bill also provides a more limited set of protections for cohabitants, opposite or same-sex who do not marry or enter civil partnership. GLEN has commissioned Dr. Fergus Ryan, Head of the Department of Law at Dublin Institute of Technology to do a legal analysis of the Civil Partnership Bill. The analysis below is in a Question and Answer format, which we hope will be useful in understanding the scope of the Bill and the extent of the rights and responsibilities proposedItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Written Reports | The Thérèse Brady Library | LIB | 346.015 RYA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00004089 |
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The Civil Partnership Bill published by the Government in June will provide civil partners with equivalent rights and obligations to married couples across a range of areas including registration, maintenance and financial support, pensions, taxation, social welfare, succession, protection in equality legislation, immigration, residential tenancies and protection of the shared home. The Bill also provides a more limited set of protections for cohabitants, opposite or same-sex who do not marry or enter civil partnership. GLEN has commissioned Dr. Fergus Ryan, Head of the Department of Law at Dublin Institute of Technology to do a legal analysis of the Civil Partnership Bill. The analysis below is in a Question and Answer format, which we hope will be useful in understanding the scope of the Bill and the extent of the rights and responsibilities proposed
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