Is a Prenuptial agreement right for me?
Resolution group in the UK reacts to Law Commission paper on Pre-nupital Agreements
Resolution, which was formerly known as the Solicitors Family Law Association (SFLA), is an organisation of 5700 lawyers based in the United Kingdom who believe in a constructive, non-confrontational approach to family law matters. Resolution also campaigns for improvements to the family justice system.
The Law Commission in the UK released a paper on the status of Pre-nupital Agreements and the Family Law Association, Resolution has called for pre-nupital agreements to be legally binding.
Study of Family Law Courts
A study of the Family Law Courts has been carried out for the Minister of State for Children by Dr Evelyn Mahon, senior lecturer in social work and social policy in Trinity College Dublin, and Elena Moore, a research graduate.
UK Maintenance Laws in Breach of European Convention on Human Rights
Court rules UK child maintenance laws discriminated against same-sex couples.
Passing of Civil Partnership Bill is an Historic Event
Partnership Bill breaks substantial new ground
CARL O'BRIEN
ANALYSIS: What does the civil partnership legislation do and how will it work?, writes CARL O'BRIEN
BY ANY yardstick, the passage of the Civil Partnership Bill through the Oireachtas is a historic development.
Sham Marriages on the Increase
Guidelines on 'sham marriages' issued following intense lobbying
JAMIE SMYTH, Social Affairs Correspondent
Sat, Oct 09, 2010
THE GOVERNMENT has issued new guidelines to marriage registrars to try to halt an increase in suspected "sham marriages" between eastern European women and non-EU nationals.
The move follows intense lobbying by several EU countries, who have raised concerns about the abuse of their citizens in Ireland following "sham marriages" conducted to circumvent Irish immigration laws.
The guidelines introduce new identification requirements for all people getting married, restrictions on the use of interpreters and the number of people who can be admitted to a registrar's office.
The countries have also warned the marriages are a "security threat" as they could be used by terrorists to gain residency rights in Ireland, which would enable them to travel freely in the EU.
The marriage scams are typically organised by men from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and some African states, who are seeking residency in Ireland. They recruit women from EU states in eastern Europe for marriages, usually offering them up to €3,000.
Latvia, which has tracked hundreds of young women coming to Ireland to engage in marriages with non-EU nationals since 2006, formally asked the Government last year to introduce tough measures to combat the scam.
A briefing paper prepared by the Latvian ministry for foreign affairs this year concludes: "In spite of all efforts of the Latvian and other EU states' embassies in Dublin, the feedback from competent Irish authorities is minimal."
Officials at the Latvian ministry of foreign affairs, interior ministry and the police told The Irish Times last month they were very frustrated by the slow response of the Government to the problem.
"We started a police investigation in 2006 and contacted the Garda but they kept silent. We called the Irish Embassy in Riga.
There was an answer that in Ireland a "sham marriage" is not a specific crime," said Arturs Vaisla, head of the Latvian police's human trafficking unit.
By the summer of 2009, the organisers understood that the Irish police could do nothing. They [the police] kept silent like rabbits.
"This was when the organisers started to use force, fraud, rape and mass rape," said Mr Vaisla, who believes the authorities would have responded faster if Irish women were being abused.
- The new guidelines for registrars introduce:a requirement for all foreign birth certificates to bear an official stamp or a letter from the country's embassy attesting to its authenticity.
- interpreters must be from an independent verifiable translation company.
- restrictions on the number of people allowed into a registrar's office when a couple are giving notice to a marriage.
- if a person's marital status cannot be determined, the registrar may ask for an official letter from the embassy proving they are free to marry.
- new ID requirements.
© 2010 The Irish Times








