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Search resuls for: "Courtney Joslin"


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A 2010 survey, called “My Daddy’s Name Is Donor” and funded by the Institute for American Values, a conservative group, claimed that many donor-conceived children felt hurt and isolated by their origins. The study wasn’t peer reviewed, and other research has showed that donor-conceived children generally do as well as their peers. They say this creates the possibility of conflicts between how teenagers define their families and how their parents do. Lowering the age “leaves family more legally vulnerable,” says Courtney Joslin, a law professor at the University of California, Davis. “And it impacts both the social perception of the family and maybe how kids and parents see each other.”
Persons: , Douglas NeJaime, , ” Malina Simard, Simard, Halm, Levy, ’ ” Simard, Courtney Joslin, Davis Organizations: Yale, Institute for American, University of California Locations: Halm
There is no state or federal law that requires DNA testing to establish paternity in the United States, despite online posts that claim various states have implemented new laws mandating that fathers submit a DNA test before signing a birth certificate. However, in no U.S. state is it mandatory for a father to establish his paternity via DNA testing. All states allow nonmarital fathers to establish their parentage without genetic testing by completing a voluntary acknowledgement of paternity form when the child is born. Family law experts said a father would only be subject to DNA testing if parentage were being determined as part of court proceedings. No U.S. states have implemented new laws requiring fathers to establish paternity via DNA testing.
Persons: ” Courtney Joslin, Martin Luther King Jr, Douglas NeJaime, Anne Urowsky, douglas, NeJaime, Joslin, ” Joslin, Read Organizations: “ New, University of California, Law, Yale Law School, LAW, Social, CSE, Reuters Locations: United States, , “ New Florida, Tennessee , Maryland, Ohio, Florida, Tennessee, Maryland, Davis
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