Regent Law Family Restoration
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The author of this blog, Professor Lynne Marie Kohm, is the John Brown McCarty Professor of Family Law at Regent University School of Law. She has written extensively about issues regarding the family. Kohm brings a servant leadership model of family preservation and restoration to the practice of family law.
Regent Law Family Restoration
1d ago
On March 26th the Supreme Court of the United States will take up the issue of abortion pills and the risk they pose to women.
Available since 2000, with no clinical trials whatsoever, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and, more recently, the Biden Administration, have loosened access to these abortion pills over the years in ways that do not protect women, but rather harm us in reckless ways.
Originally, abortion pills (mifepristone which inhibits implantation and stops embryo growth, and misoprostol which causes cramping and bleeding to evacuate the uterus) could ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
6d ago
This post is courtesy of Regent Law Family Law student Caleb Ridings:
The debate over regulation of pornography has entered a new stage, demarcated by the sudden popularity of age verification statutes. Beginning with Louisiana in 2022, state legislatures have begun to seriously address the problem of children’s access to internet pornography. Currently eight states have enacted laws requiring users to verify their age to access adult websites. Dozens of other states are working on similar l ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1w ago
Minnesota’s legislature is introducing a robust Uniform Parent Act, or UPA this week that will be focused on surrogacy rights and duties in that state.
In training my law students in this area of law I tend to focus on three principles that seem to be important guides for both policy, and client surrogacy or in vitro fertilization (IVF) decisions:
1. State policy and legal guidance should help every client take personal responsibility for the children they conceive/create. This intention helps to limit the options of destruction of or research on embryos, and causes s ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1w ago
“A child born to another woman calls me momma; the depth of that tragedy and the magnitude of that privilege are not lost on me.” &nb ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1w ago
This is reposted from The Virginia Family Foundation's President, Victoria Cobb:Tuesday, March 12, 2024
Sadly, last week Governor Youngkin signed HB 174 (D-Henson) into law, which establishes for the first time in our state Code the formal recognition and enforcement of so-called “same-sex marriage.” Aside from the obvious and numerous worldview implications of redefining the bedrock institution of marriage in law, HB 174 will jeopardize conscience and religious protections for those who officiate weddings, and it further embeds th ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
2w ago
HOMEPODCASTABOUT USWRITERSTIPSDONATE
NEWS
ABORTIONBORDER CRISISISRAELPARENTAL RIGHTSGOOD NEWS
COMMENTARY in the Washington Stand:
Pro-Life Women Physicians
Show a Path Forward for Life
In honor of women everywhere, Regent Professor Dr. Robert Schwarzwalder has published a tribute to the female medical professionals of recent history who stood staunchly opposed to abortion. Read it at: Pro-Life Women Physicians Show a Path Forward for Life (washingtonstand.com).
To learn more about women standing against abortion download:
The Rise and Fall of Women’s Rights: Have Sexual ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
2w ago
This guest post is from Anne Darby Keating, Regent Law 2L:
Modern-day foster care is often split into two categories: traditional foster care and kinship care. Kinship care is where relatives of the foster child take the child in rather than the child becoming a ward of the state and living with an unknown foster family. In South Carolina “kin” to the child could be a relative or a family friend or a neighbor (known as “fictive kin”) (S.C. Code Ann. § 63-7-2320). In the past, kinship caregivers could not receive state funding that traditional foster parents could be ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1M ago
This guest post is from Regent Law student David Servin:
Grandpa Used to Share
There was a time when three or four generations would live together in the same home. Today, we're all so busy, we’re more mobile, and families don't always stay close to each other. As we age, we are more likely to depend on Social Security and government programs to sustain us.
People tend to transition from owning a home to becoming an empty nester to downsizing to a smaller place when the kids leave ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1M ago
This guest post is from Madison LaRowe, Regent Law 2L:
A topic that I came across that I found interesting was how family cemeteries can help reduce property taxes in Virginia. According to Article X, Section 6(a)(3) private or public burial grounds are exempt from taxation if they are not operated for profit. The property would be excluded from state and local tax, and it would also be excluded from inheritance taxes. This is also codified in section 58.1-3606(A)(3) of the Virginia code.
Even if you are allowed to have a private cemetery th ..read more
Regent Law Family Restoration
1M ago
This guest post is from Regent Law 2L Benjamin Sacaciu:
The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program has been a vital lifeline for thousands of young individuals who arrived in the United States before turning 16. These individuals, often called dreamers, have grown up in our country, attended schools, and built their lives in the only country they can truly call home. However, the current limitations of DACA prevent these dreamers from realizing their full potential and contributing to the nation ..read more