Nature v. Nurture: Children Left Fatherless and Family-Less When Nature Prevails in Paternity Actions

Authors

  • Niccol Kording

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/lawreview.2004.6

Abstract

Those words describe the feeling many parents get from parenthood and from being part of a family, regardless of whether the child is their biological offspring, stepchild, surrogate child, or adopted child. All these families and children born of biological connections or traditional families enjoy some protection under statutory or common law paternity or parentage laws. The Uniform Parentage Act and similar paternity laws protect traditional families under the marital or legitimacy presumption, which provides that children born during a marriage or within the period of gestation thereafter are presumed to be the biological children of the husband and wife.

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Published

2004-04-26

How to Cite

Kording, Niccol. 2004. “Nature V. Nurture: Children Left Fatherless and Family-Less When Nature Prevails in Paternity Actions”. University of Pittsburgh Law Review 65 (4). https://doi.org/10.5195/lawreview.2004.6.

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Articles