Law and policy in modern family finance : property division in the 21st century / edited by Jessica Palmer, Nicola Peart, Margaret Briggs, Mark Henaghan.

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Publication details:
Cambridge : Intersentia Ltd., 2017.
Edition:
1st edition
Record id:
88408
Subject:
New Zealand. -- Property (Relationships) Act 1976.
Equitable distribution of marital property.
Marital property.
Contents:
1. Introduction
Part I: Who should be covered by a property sharing regime?
2. Reconsidering family property law in the post-marital age
3. Which relationships should be included in the property sharing scheme?
4. Children's interests in division of property on relationship breakdown
5. Family finances on death of a spouse or partner
6. A lament for 'testator's family maintenance' - a good idea gone wrong? Australian reflections
Part II: What property should be covered by a property sharing regime?
7. Classifying relationship property - a radical re-shaping?
8. What to do about trusts?
9. Should indigenous property be relationship property?
10. Valuation of relationship property: an evaluation of practice and procedure
Part III: How should property be shared at the end of a relationship?
11. Should the regime be discretionary or rules-based?
12. Sharing family finances at the end of a relationship
13. Should a property sharing regime be mandatory or optional?
14. Contracting out of the default relationship property regime - comparative observations
15. Maintenance - time for a clean break?
Summary:
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' 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. - Publisher's website.
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781780684642
Phys. description:
xxvi, 420 p. : ill. ; 26 cm