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Cross-Border Recognition of Formalized Same-Sex Relationships


ISBN13: 9781839702563
Published: September 2022
Publisher: Intersentia Publishers
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £138.00



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Same-sex relationships have successively qualified for formalization through marriage or registered partnership in many European countries. However, some EU Member States still refuse to give them any form of recognition or only allow very limited legal effects. The irregular speed of development in domestic family laws in EU Member States results in “limping family” relations, that is, family relations that are recognised as creating a formal civil status in many EU Member States, but not in all of them. The ordre public safeguard of private international law has widely been used to justify why a same-sex marriage or registered partnership cannot be recognised. The pretext tends to be that national identity, allegedly, becomes threatened. Nevertheless, the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of European Union provides new standards for recognition, which create legal obligations for EU Member States.

The author focuses on the interaction between human rights standards and private international law, carrying out a deft investigation of the impact of “Europeanization” on this interaction, analysing legal effects of same-sex marriages and registered partnerships in the Baltic States and Poland in a cross-border context. The central theme in this book is the elusive and ever-changing concept of ordre public, and the interplay between its understanding(s) at the national and European levels.

The aim of this book is to evaluate the impact of culture in this area of study, within the context of the analysed States’ recent histories, societal developments, and religions. This book is published at a time of clashes between traditional family values and gender equality in Europe. In States like Lithuania and Poland, the heterosexual nature of marriage is considered to be a fundamental component of the State’s national identity and public policy. Nevertheless, the book reveals how different legal understandings of national identity, ordre public, and the family can co-exist in parallel.

Subjects:
Family Law
Contents:
PART I. SETTING THE STAGE
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. The Theory on Ordre Public in Private International Law
PART II. THE ORDRE PUBLIC IN THE BALTIC STATES AND POLAND
Chapter 3. Cross-Border Recognition of Formalized Family Status in the Baltic States and Poland
Chapter 4. Inclusion of Formalized Same-Sex Relationships into Civil Registry and the Right to Enter and Reside
PART III. THE EUROPEAN AND THE EU ORDRE PUBLIC
Chapter 5. “For the Sole Purpose of” Approach to Formalized Same-Sex Relationships
Chapter 6. Cross-Border Recognition of the Civil Status in Previous Case-Law of European Supranational Courts
Chapter 7. Supranational European Law of the Future: Cross-Border Recognition of Same-Sex Marriages in Full
Chapter 8. International Treaties on Cross-Border Recognition of Marriages and Partnerships
PART IV. LEGAL EFFECTS OF FORMALIZED SAME-SEX RELATIONSHIPS: NATIONAL AND SUPRANATIONAL LAW
Chapter 9. Granting Formalized Same-Sex Relationships Certain Legal Effects in Family Law and Beyond: Recognition in Part under Supranational European Law
Chapter 10. Granting Formalized Same-Sex Relationship Effects in Family Law and Beyond: National Law
PART V. LAW IN CONTEXT
Chapter 11. Private International Law in Context
Chapter 12. Contextualizing Social and Legal Developments in the Baltic States and Poland
Chapter 13. Protection against and Re-Cognition of “Foreign” Realities
Chapter 14. Conclusions