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Wikipedia

Divorce

Divorce (also known as dissolution of marriage) is the process of terminating a marriage or marital union.[1] Divorce usually entails the canceling or reorganizing of the legal duties and responsibilities of marriage, thus dissolving the bonds of matrimony between a married couple under the rule of law of the particular country or state. It can be said to be a legal dissolution of a marriage by a court or other competent body.[2] It is the legal process of ending a marriage.[3]

In the United States, divorce is governed by state law, so the specific requirements and procedures vary by state. Generally, a divorce is initiated by one spouse filing a petition for divorce with the court. The other spouse must be served with notice of the petition, and he or she has the right to respond with an answer or counter-petition. Depending on the state, the parties may also be required to attend mediation or a settlement conference in order to resolve any issues. After the issues have been resolved, the court will enter a judgment of divorce, which officially terminates the marriage. Divorce can involve a variety of issues, including but not limited to child custody, child support, spousal support, division of property, and allocation of debt. Depending on the state, the court may also consider the parties’ financial resources and the standard of living during marriage when making decisions regarding alimony.

Divorce laws vary considerably around the world,[1] but in most countries, divorce requires the sanction of a court or other authority in a legal process, which may involve issues of distribution of property,[4] child custody,[4] alimony (spousal support), child visitation / access, parenting time, child support, and division of debt. In most countries, monogamy is required by law, so divorce allows each former partner to marry another person.

Divorce is different from annulment, which declares the marriage null and void, with legal separation or de jure separation (a legal process by which a married couple may formalize a de facto separation while remaining legally married) or with de facto separation (a process where the spouses informally stop cohabiting). Reasons for divorce vary, from sexual incompatibility or lack of independence for one or both spouses to a personality clash or infidelity.[5]

The only countries that do not allow divorce are the Philippines and the Vatican City. In the Philippines, divorce for non-Muslim Filipinos is not legal unless the husband or wife is an undocumented immigrant and satisfies certain conditions.[6] The Vatican City is a state ruled by the head of the Catholic Church, a religion that does not allow for divorce. Countries that have relatively recently legalized divorce are Italy (1970), Portugal (1975, although from 1910 to 1940 it was possible both for the civil and religious marriage), Brazil (1977), Spain (1981), Argentina (1987),[7] Paraguay (1991),[8] Colombia (1991; from 1976 was allowed only for non-Catholics),[8] Andorra (1995),[9] Ireland (1996), Chile (2004)[10] and Malta (2011).

Overview

Grounds for divorce vary widely from country to country. Marriage may be seen as a contract, a status, or a combination of these.[11] Where it is seen as a contract, the refusal or inability of one spouse to perform the obligations stipulated in the contract may constitute a ground for divorce for the other spouse. In contrast, in some countries (such as Sweden,[12] Finland,[13] Australia,[14] New Zealand),[15] divorce is purely no fault. This means it does not matter what the reasons are that a party or parties want to separate. They can separate of their own free will without having to prove someone is at fault for the divorce. Many jurisdictions offer both the option of a no fault divorce as well as an at fault divorce. This is the case, for example, in many states of the US, France and the Czech Republic.[16]

Though divorce laws vary between jurisdictions, there are two basic approaches to divorce: fault based and no-fault based. However, even in some jurisdictions that do not require a party to claim fault of their partner, a court may still take into account the behavior of the parties when dividing property, debts, evaluating custody, shared care arrangements and support. In some jurisdictions, one spouse may be forced to pay the attorney's fees of another spouse.[17]

Laws vary as to the waiting period before a divorce is effective. Also, residency requirements vary. However, issues of division of property are typically determined by the law of the jurisdiction in which the property is located.[18]

In Europe, divorce laws differ from country to country, reflecting differing legal and cultural traditions. In some countries, particularly (but not only) in some former communist countries, divorce can be obtained only on one single general ground of "irretrievable breakdown of the marriage" (or a similar formulation). Yet, what constitutes such a "breakdown" of the marriage is interpreted very differently from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, ranging from very liberal interpretations (e.g. Netherlands)[19] to quite restrictive ones (e.g., in Poland, there must be an "irretrievable and complete disintegration of matrimonial life", but there are many restrictions to granting a divorce).[20][21] Separation constitutes a ground of divorce in some European countries (in Germany, e.g., a divorce is granted on the basis of a 1-year separation if both spouses consent, or 3-year separation if only one spouse consents).[22] Note that "separation" does not necessarily mean separate residences – in some jurisdictions, living in the same household but leading a separate life (e.g., eating, sleeping, socializing, etc. separately) is sufficient to constitute de facto separation; this is explicitly stated, e.g., in the family laws of Latvia[23] or the Czech Republic.[16]

Divorce laws are not static; they often change reflecting evolving social norms of societies. In the 21st century, many European countries have made changes to their divorce laws, in particular by reducing the length of the necessary periods of separation, e.g., Scotland in 2006 (1 or 2 years from the previous 2 or 5 years); France in 2005 (2 years from the previous 6 years),[24] Switzerland in 2005 (2 years from the previous 4 years),[25] Greece in 2008 (2 years from the previous 4 years).[26] Some countries have completely overhauled their divorce laws, such as Spain in 2005,[27] and Portugal in 2008. A new divorce law also came into force in September 2007 in Belgium, creating a new system that is primarily no-fault.[28] Bulgaria also modified its divorce regulations in 2009. Also in Italy, new laws came into force in 2014 and 2015 with significant changes in Italian law in matter of divorce: apart from shortening of the period of obligatory separation (6 months for consensual separations and 1 year for contested ones from the previous 3 years), are allowed other forms of getting a divorce – as an alternative to court proceedings, i.e. the negotiations with the participation of an advocate or agreement made before the registrar of Public Registry Office.[29] Austria by contrast is a European country where the divorce law still remains conservative.[30]

The liberalization of divorce laws is not without opposition, particularly in the United States.[citation needed] Indeed, in the US, certain conservative and religious organizations are lobbying for laws which restrict divorce. In 2011, in the US, the Coalition for Divorce Reform was established, describing itself as an organization "dedicated to supporting efforts to reduce unnecessary divorce and promote healthy marriages".[31][undue weight? ]

The magisterium of the Roman Catholic Church founds the concept of marriage on natural moral law, elaborated by St. Thomas Aquinas, supplemented by the revealed Divine law. The doctrine of the Doctor Angelicus has been partially shared by the Eastern Orthodox Church in the course of history.[32]

Law

Types

In some jurisdictions, the courts will seldom apply principles of fault, but might willingly hold a party liable for a breach of a fiduciary duty to his or her spouse. Grounds for divorce differs from jurisdiction to jurisdiction in the worldwide. Some states have no-fault divorce; some states require a declaration of fault on the part of one partner or both; some states allow either method.[33]

In most jurisdictions, a divorce must be certified or ordered by a Judge in a court of law to come into effect. The terms of the divorce are usually determined by the courts, though they may take into account prenuptial agreements or post-nuptial agreements, or ratify terms that the spouses may have agreed to privately, while in other areas, agreements related to the marriage have to be rendered in writing to be enforceable. In the absence of agreement, a contested divorce may be stressful to the spouses.

In some countries,[where?] when the spouses agree to divorce and to the terms of the divorce, it can be certified by a non-judiciary administrative entity. The effect of a divorce is that both parties are free to marry again if a filing in an appellate court does not overturn the decision.

Contested divorce

Contested divorces mean that one of several issues are required to be heard by a judge at trial level—this is more expensive, and the parties will have to pay for a lawyer's time and preparation. In such a divorce the spouses are not able to agree on issues for instance child custody and division of marital assets. In such situations, the litigation process takes longer to conclude.[34] The judge controls the outcome of the case. Less adversarial approaches to divorce settlements have recently emerged, such as mediation and collaborative divorce settlement, which negotiate mutually acceptable resolution to conflicts. This principle in the United States is called 'Alternative Dispute Resolution' and has gained popularity.

At-fault divorce

Before the late 1960s, nearly all countries that permitted divorce required proof by one party that the other party had committed an act incompatible with the marriage. This was termed "grounds" for divorce (popularly called "fault") and was the only way to terminate a marriage. No-fault divorce is available in Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States and other Western countries.

Fault-based divorces can be contested; evaluation of offences may involve allegations of collusion of the parties working together to get the divorce, or condonation by approving the offence, connivance by tricking someone into committing an offence, or provocation by the other party. Contested fault divorces can be expensive, and not usually practical as eventually most divorces are granted. Comparative rectitude is a doctrine used to determine which spouse is more at fault when both spouses are guilty of breaches.[35]

The grounds for a divorce which a party could raise and need to prove included 'desertion,' 'abandonment,' 'cruelty,' or 'adultery.' The requirement of proving a ground was revised and withdrawn by the terms of 'no-fault' statutes, which became popular in many Western countries in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In 'no-fault' jurisdictions divorce can be obtained either on a simple allegation of 'irreconcilable differences,' 'irretrievable break-down', or 'incompatibility' with respect to the marriage relationship, or on the ground of de facto separation.

Summary divorce

A summary or simpledivorce, available in some jurisdictions[which?], is used when spouses meet certain eligibility requirements or can agree on key issues beforehand.

Key factors:

  • Short duration of marriage (less than five years)
  • Absence of children (or, in some jurisdictions, prior allocation of child custody and of child-support direction and amount)
  • Absence or minimal value of real property at issue and any associated encumbrances such as mortgages
  • Absence of agreed-as-marital property above a given value threshold (around $35,000 not including vehicles)
  • Absence, with respect to each spouse, of claims to personal property above a given value threshold, typically the same as that for total marital property, with such claims including claims to exclusive previous ownership of property described by the other spouse as marital

No-fault divorce

Most Western jurisdictions have a no-fault divorce system, which requires no allegation or proof of fault of either party.[36] The barest of assertions suffice. For example, in countries that require "irretrievable breakdown", the mere assertion that the marriage has broken down will satisfy the judicial officer. In other jurisdictions requiring irreconcilable differences, the mere allegation that the marriage has been irreparable by these differences is enough for granting a divorce. Courts will not inquire into facts. A "yes" is enough, even if the other party vehemently says "no".

The application can be made by either party or by both parties jointly.

In jurisdictions adopting the 'no-fault' principle regarding whether to grant a divorce, some courts may still take into account the fault of the parties when determining some aspects of the content of the divorce decree, e.g., its terms for the division of property and debts and the absence, or amount, of spousal support. Provisions related to child custody are determined using a different fundamental standard: the child's or children's best interests; At the same time, some behaviors that may constitute marital fault e.g., violence, cruelty, endangerment, neglect, or substance abuse may also qualify as factors to be considered when determining child custody, they do so for the independent reason that they provide evidence as to what arrangement is in the child's or children's best interests in the future.

Uncontested divorce

It is estimated that upwards of 95% of divorces in the U.S. are "uncontested",[37] because the two parties are able to come to an agreement (either with or without lawyers/mediators/collaborative counsel) about the property, children, and support issues. When the parties can agree and present the court with a fair and equitable agreement, approval of the divorce is typically guaranteed. If the two parties cannot come to an agreement, they may ask the court to decide how to split property and deal with the custody of their children. Though this may be necessary, the courts would prefer parties to come to an agreement prior to entering court.

Where the issues are not complex and the parties are cooperative, a settlement often can be directly negotiated between them. In the majority of cases, forms are acquired from their respective state websites and a filing fee is paid to the state.[38] Most U.S. states charge between $175 and $350 for a simple divorce filing.[39][40][41] Collaborative divorce and mediated divorce are considered uncontested divorces.

In the United States, many state court systems are experiencing an increasing proportion of pro se (i.e., litigants represent themselves without a lawyer) in divorce cases.[42] In San Diego, for example, the number of divorce filings involving at least one self-representing litigant rose from 46% in 1992 to 77% in 2000, and in Florida from 66% in 1999 to 73% in 2001. Urban courts in California report that approximately 80% of the new divorce filings are filed pro se.[43]

Collaborative divorce

Collaborative divorce is a method for divorcing couples to come to an agreement on divorce issues. In a collaborative divorce, the parties negotiate an agreed resolution with the assistance of attorneys who are trained in the collaborative divorce process and in mediation and often with the assistance of a neutral financial specialist or divorce coaches. The parties are empowered to make their own decisions based on their own needs and interests, but with complete information and full professional support.

Once the collaborative divorce starts, the lawyers are disqualified from representing the parties in a contested legal proceeding, should the collaborative law process end prematurely. Most attorneys who practise collaborative divorce claim that it can be more cost-effective than other divorce methods, e.g., going to court.[44]

Electronic divorce

Portugal, for example, allows two persons to file an electronic request for no-fault collaborative divorce in a non judiciary administrative entity. In specific cases, with no children, real property, alimony, or common address, can be completed within one hour.[citation needed][45][46]

Mediated divorce

Divorce mediation is an alternative to traditional divorce litigation. In a divorce mediation session, a mediator facilitates the discussion between the two parties by assisting with communication and providing information and suggestions to help resolve differences. At the end of the mediation process, the separating parties have typically developed a tailored divorce agreement that can be submitted to the court. Mediation sessions can include either party's attorneys, a neutral attorney, or an attorney-mediator who can inform both parties of their legal rights, but does not provide advice to either, or can be conducted with the assistance of a facilitative or transformative mediator without attorneys present at all. Some mediation companies, such as Wevorce, also pair clients with counselors, financial planners and other professionals to work through common mediation sticking points.[47] Divorce mediators may be attorneys who have experience in divorce cases, or they may be professional mediators who are not attorneys, but who have training specifically in the area of family court matters. Divorce mediation can be significantly less costly, both financially and emotionally, than litigation. The adherence rate to mediated agreements is much higher than that of adherence to court orders.[48]

Polygamy and divorce

Polygyny is a significant structural factor governing divorce in countries where this is permitted. Little-to-no analysis has been completed to explicitly explain the link between marital instability and polygyny which leads to divorce. The frequency of divorce rises in polygynous marriages compared to monogamous relationships. Within polygynous unions, differences in conjugal stability are found to occur by wife order. There are 3 main mechanisms through which polygyny affects divorce: economic restraint, sexual satisfaction, and childlessness. Many women escape economic restraint through divorcing their spouses when they are allowed to initiate a divorce.[49]

 
"Just Divorced!" hand-written on an automobile's rear window.

Causes

An annual study in the UK by management consultants Grant Thornton, estimates the main proximal causes of divorce based on surveys of matrimonial lawyers.[50]

The main causes in 2004 were:

According to this survey, husbands engaged in extramarital affairs in 75% of cases, and wives in 25%. In cases of family strain, wives' families were the primary source of strain in 78%, compared to 22% of husbands' families. Emotional and physical abuse were more evenly split, with wives affected in 60% and husbands in 40% of cases. In 70% of workaholism-related divorces it was husbands who were the cause, and in 30%, wives. The 2004 survey found that 93% of divorce cases were petitioned by wives, very few of which were contested. 53% of divorces were marriages that had lasted 10 to 15 years, with 40% ending after 5 to 10 years. The first 5 years are relatively divorce-free, and if a marriage survives more than 20 years it is unlikely to end in divorce.

Social scientists study the causes of divorce in terms of underlying factors that may motivate divorce. One of these factors is the age at which a person gets married; delaying marriage may provide more opportunity or experience in choosing a compatible partner.[51][52] Wage, income, and sex ratios are other such underlying factors that have been included in analyses by sociologists and economists.[53][54]

The elevation of divorce rates among couples who cohabited before marriage is called the "cohabitation effect". Evidence suggests that although this correlation is partly due to two forms of selection (a) that persons whose moral or religious codes permit cohabitation are also more likely to consider divorce permitted by morality or religion and (b) that marriage based on low levels of commitment is more common among couples who cohabit than among couples who do not, such that the mean and median levels of commitment at the start of marriage are lower among cohabiting than among non-cohabiting couples), the cohabitation experience itself exerts at least some independent effect on the subsequent marital union.[55]

In 2010, a study by Jay Teachman published in Journal of Marriage and Family found that women who have cohabited or had premarital sex with men other than their husbands have an increased risk of divorce and that this effect is strongest for women who have cohabited with multiple men before marriage. To Teachman, the fact that the elevated risk of divorce is only experienced when the premarital partner(s) is someone other than the husband indicates that premarital sex and cohabitation are now a normal part of the courtship process in the United States.[56] This study only considers data on women in the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth in the United States. Divorce is sometimes caused by one of the partners finding the other unattractive.[57]

Recent studies show that the cohabitation effect on divorce varies across different cultures and periods. Another article published in Journal of Marriage and Family found that when cohabitation was uncommon in pre-reform China, premarital cohabitation increased the likelihood of subsequent divorce, but this association disappeared when cohabitation became prevalent.[58]

Effects

Some of the effects associated with divorce include academic, behavioral, and psychological problems. Although this may not always be true, studies suggest that children from divorced families are more likely to exhibit such behavioral issues than non-divorced families.[59]

Divorce and relationships

Research done at Northern Illinois University on Family and Child Studies suggests that divorce of couples experiencing high conflict can positively affect families by reducing conflict in the home. There are, however, many instances when the parent-child relationship may suffer due to divorce. Financial support is many times lost when an adult goes through a divorce. The adult may be obligated to obtain additional work to maintain financial stability. This can lead to a negative relationship between the parent and child; the relationship may suffer due to a lack of attention towards the child and minimal parental supervision[59]

Studies have also shown that parental skills decrease after a divorce occurs; however, this effect is only a temporary change. "Many researchers have shown that a disequilibrium, including diminished parenting skills, occurs in the year following the divorce but that by two years after the divorce re-stabilization has occurred and parenting skills have improved."[60]

Some couples choose divorce even when one spouse's desire to remain married is greater than the other spouse's desire to obtain a divorce. In economics, this is known as the Zelder Paradox and is more familiar with marriages that have produced children and less common with childless couples.[61]

Research has also found that recent divorcees report significantly higher hostility levels after the divorce than before, and that this effect applies equally to both male and female divorcees.[62]

In an American Psychological Association study of parents' relocation after a divorce, researchers found that a move has a long-term effect on children. In the first study conducted amongst 2,000 college students on the effects of parental relocation relating to their children's well-being after divorce, researchers found major differences. In divorced families in which one parent moved, the students received less financial support from their parents compared with divorced families in which neither parent moved. These findings also imply other negative outcomes for these students, such as more distress related to the divorce and did not feel a sense of emotional support from their parents. Although the data suggests negative outcomes for these students whose parents relocate after divorce, there is insufficient research that can alone prove the overall well-being of the child[63] A newer study in the Journal of Family Psychology found that parents who move more than an hour away from their children after a divorce are much less well off than those parents who stayed in the same location[64]

Effects on children

Psychological

Divorce is associated with diminished psychological well-being in children and adult offspring of divorced parents, including greater unhappiness, less satisfaction with life, weaker sense of personal control, anxiety, depression, and greater use of mental health services. A preponderance of evidence indicates that there is a causal effect between divorce and these outcomes.[65]

A study in Sweden led by the Centre for Health Equity Studies (Chess) at Stockholm University/Karolinska Institutet, is published in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health found that children living with just one parent after divorce suffer from more problems such as headaches, stomach aches, feelings of tension and sadness than those whose parents share custody.[66]

Children of divorced parents are also more likely to experience conflict in their own marriages, and are more likely to experience divorce themselves. They are also more likely to be involved in short-term cohabiting relationships, which often dissolve before marriage.[65] There are many studies that show proof of an intergenerational transmission of divorce, but this does not mean that having divorced parents will absolutely lead a child to divorce. There are two key factors that make this transmission of divorce more likely. First, inherited biological tendencies or genetic conditions may predispose a child to divorce as well as the "model of marriage" presented by the child's parents.[67]

According to Nicholas Wall, former President of the Family Division of the English High Court, "People think that post-separation parenting is easy – in fact, it is exceedingly difficult, and as a rule of thumb my experience is that the more intelligent the parent, the more intractable the dispute. There is nothing worse, for most children, than for their parents to denigrate each other. Parents simply do not realize the damage they do to their children by the battles they wage over them. Separating parents rarely behave reasonably, although they always believe that they are doing so, and that the other party is behaving unreasonably."[68]

Children involved in high-conflict divorce or custody cases can experience varying forms of psychological distress due to conflict between their parents.[69] Legal professionals recognize that alienating behaviors are common in child custody cases, but are cautious about accepting the concept of parental alienation.[70]

Research shows that children can be affected 2–4 years before the separation or divorce even occurs. This can be due to parental conflict and anticipation of a divorce, and decreased parental contact. Many couples believe that by separating, or becoming legally divorced that they are helping their children, and in situations of extreme parental conflict or abuse it most likely will be beneficial.[71]

Exposure to marital conflict and instability, most often has negative consequences for children. Several mechanisms are likely to be responsible. First, observing overt conflict between parents is a direct stressor for children.[72] Observational studies reveal that children react to inter-parental conflict with fear, anger, or the inhibition of normal behavior. Preschool children – who tend to be egocentric – may blame themselves for marital conflict, resulting in feelings of guilt and lowered self-esteem. Conflict between parents also tends to spill over and negatively affect the quality of parents' interactions with their children. Researchers found that the associations between marital conflict and children's externalizing and internalizing problems were largely mediated by parents' use of harsh punishment and parent–child conflict. Furthermore, modeling verbal or physical aggression, parents "teach" their children that disagreements are resolved through conflict rather than calm discussion. As a result, children may not learn the social skills (such as the ability to negotiate and reach compromises) that are necessary to form mutually rewarding relationships with peers.[73]

Girls and boys deal with divorce differently. For instance, girls who initially show signs of adapting well, later suffer from anxiety in romantic relationships with men. Studies also showed that girls who were separated from their fathers at a younger age tended to be angrier toward the situation as they aged. Anger and sadness were also observed as common feelings in adolescents who had experienced parental divorce.[74]

Academic and socioeconomic

Frequently, children who have experienced a divorce have lower academic achievement than children from non-divorced families[75] In a review of family and school factors related to adolescents' academic performance, it noted that a child from a divorced family is two times more likely to drop out of high school than a child from a non-divorced family. These children from divorced families may also be less likely to attend college, resulting in the discontinuation of their academic career.[76]

Many times academic problems are associated with those children from single-parent families. Studies have shown that this issue may be directly related to the economical influence of divorce. A divorce may result in the parent and children moving to an area with a higher poverty rate and a poor education system all due to the financial struggles of a single parent.[77]

Children of divorced parents also achieve lower levels of socioeconomic status, income, and wealth accumulation than children of continuously married parents. These outcomes are associated with lower educational achievement.[65]

Young men or women between the ages of 7 and 16 who had experienced the divorce of their parents were more likely than youths who had not experienced the divorce of their parents to leave home because of friction, to cohabit before marriage, and to parent a child before marriage.[78]

Divorce often leads to worsened academic achievement in children ages 7–12, the most heightened negative effect being reading test scores. These negative effects tend to persist, and even escalate after the divorce or separation occurs.[71]

Children of divorced or separated parents exhibit increased behavioral problems and the marital conflict that accompanies parents' divorce places the child's social competence at risk.[79]

Divorce of elderly couples

In the United States of America, since the mid-1990s, the divorce rate has increased to over 50% among baby boomers. More and more seniors are staying single; an analysis of census data conducted at Bowling Green State University predicted that divorce numbers would continue to rise. Baby boomers who remain unmarried are five times more likely to live in poverty than those who are married. They are also three times as likely to receive food stamps, public assistance or disability payments.[80]

Sociologists believe that the rise in the number of older Americans who are not married is a result of factors such as longevity and economics. Women, especially, are becoming more and more financially independent which allows them to feel more secure with being alone, in addition to changing perceptions of being divorced or single. This has resulted in less pressure for baby boomers to marry or stay married.[80]

Statistics

Asia

China

China currently holds one of the highest divorce rates in the Asia Pacific region. Compared to 2000, China's divorce rates have gone up substantially from a 0.96 crude divorce rate to 3.09 rate in 2020.[81] While China's divorce rate has been increasing since 2000, the highest recorded crude divorce rate in the past 20 years was in 2019 with 3.36 divorces.[81] However, since 2019, China's recorded divorce rate has gone down.

China has no-fault divorce which was implemented through the New Marriage Law in 1950. This allows individuals to divorce without showing any evidence of wrongdoing. China is one of the only Asian countries which permits no-fault divorce.[citation needed]

As of January 2021, China introduced a new policy called the "cooling-off rule".  China, seeing the rise in divorce rates increasing on a yearly basis, the Marriage and Family Edition of Civil Code of the People's Republic of China secured an article 1077 establishing a mandatory cooling-off period, which has two requirements. First, on the day in which authorities have received the divorce applications, both parties can withdraw the registration within 30 days, and additionally to that, after 30 days are up, couples are required to physically apply for divorce certificate, and if they do not show up, the initial divorce application will be automatically perceived as withdrawn.[82] This novel policy has been extremely controversial, where couples are required to wait for at least 30-days before they can commence a divorce. The 30-day cooling off period is created with the aim of generating more social stability, which avoids couples from making rushed or in-the-heat-of-the-moment emotionally-charged decisions. Family stability has always been culturally rooted in China, influenced by Confucian beliefs where the harmony of family brings the success of everything.[83] A divorce can only be granted when couples have gone through a one-month long delay in order to make a decision.

Since the implementation of the cooling-off rule, China's Ministry of Civil Affairs discovered as sharp 72 percent drop in divorce rates since the last quarter.[84] Given the 30-days of cooling-off time, many couples have changed their minds, supporting the argument that most divorce decisions are made irrationally and emotionally. Although there has been a positive effect to reduce divorce in the country, Chinese citizens are not responding well to the cooling-off policy, which concerns women in marriages experiencing domestic abuse. In fact, from China Digital Times, a woman by the name of Kan Xiaofang died of domestic abuse because when she filed for divorce in 2021, she had to wait 30-days for the divorce to be finalized – she was "hacked to death" by her husband.[85] The 30-day rule has angered Chinese feminists, who believes that the policy undermines the concept of freedom, and does not take into consideration of domestic violence, which runs common within Chinese households. The cooling-off policy is still relatively new today, only being less than 2-years old. Therefore, this policy is still one that needs to be examined more deeply to analyze the effect and consequences of delaying the divorce process.

India

India has one of the lowest divorce rates in the world with around 1% of marriages ending in divorces. That being said, a lot of individuals split without choosing to go through the process of divorce. In fact, a large number of marriages are not registered and thus, a dissolution in such partnership would not be shown in the divorce statistics.[86] Additionally, divorce is still stigmatized and seen as taboo amongst many families in India.

The Hindu Marriage Act is an Act of the Parliament of India enacted in 1955. Three other important acts were also enacted as part of the Hindu Code Bills during this time: the Hindu Succession Act (1956), the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act (1956), the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act (1956). Divorce under various acts in India:

  • The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936
  • The Dissolution of Muslim Marriage Act, 1939
  • The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936
  • The Special Marriage Act, 1954
  • The Foreign Marriage Act, 1969
  • The Dissolution of Marriage and Judicial separation (under the Indian Divorce Act, 1869).

Due to the existence of diverse religious faiths in India, the Indian Judiciary has implemented laws separately for couples belonging to different religious beliefs. Mutual consent divorce procedure is relatively easier and fast while contested divorce procedure takes longer and depends on the religions of the couples.

Indonesia

In 2020 there were around 291,000 divorces recorded in Indonesia.[87] These numbers are lower than the previous year – reportedly due to the pandemic and a longer process of the dissolution process. Divorces are settled in religious courts, if they are Muslim, or through 'talaq' where a married man can pronounce divorce to his wife. There are six grounds of divorce, with an additional two for Moslem marriages, which include:[88]

  1. One of the spouse has committed adultery, is an alcoholic, is addicted to drugs, is a gambler or other vices which are difficult to cure;
  2. One of the spouse has deserted the other spouse for two consecutive years – without consent and without legitimate reasons;
  3. One of the spouse has been sentenced to imprisonment for five years or more;
  4. One of the spouses has resorted to cruelty or severe ill-treatment, endangering the life of the other spouse;
  5. One of the spouse has developed a disability or disease, preventing from him or her from fulfilling the duties of husband or wife;
  6. The spouses have irreconcilable differences as evidenced by frequent disagreements.
  7. The husband has violated taklik talak (a promise that the husband expressly made and written onto the marriage certificate).
  8. One party convert from Islam into another faith.

Japan

In Japan, divorces were on an upward trend from the 1960s until 2002 when they hit a peak of 290,000 divorces.[89] While divorce rates have increased since the 1900s, they have also slightly declined since 2002. In fact, in 2020 there were approximately 193,300 divorces.[89] This is a significant decrease from the prior year, 2019, which recorded 208,489 divorces.[90]

There are several types of divorces in Japan; Divorce by Agreement, Divorce by Conciliation, and Divorce by Judgement.  Divorce by Agreement (rikon), occurs when both parties mutually agree to separate and do not need to go to court. This is the most common type of divorce in Japan. Divorce by Conciliation (chotei rikon) is sought out when individuals are unable to agree on terms or separate. Thus, these cases go to court in hope to come to a mutual agreement for both parties. Lastly, Divorce by Judgement (saiban rikon) occurs when individuals are unable to reach an agreement in court during conciliation. Divorce by judgement is uncommon in Japan.

Singapore

Singapore has a crude divorce rate of 1.7 divorce per 1,000 residents.[91] Singapore has seen a decrease in divorce rates compared to previous years. In fact, 2020 marks the lowest number of divorces recorded. In 2020, there were 6,700 divorces compared to 2015–2019, which recorded an average number of 7,536 marital dissolutions.[91] Additionally, most divorces were initiated by women.

Singapore requires you to be married for three years before filing for divorce. That being said, if one has suffered exceptional hardship, they are eligible to file for divorce before the three years. Additionally, to get a divorce, there must be proof of an "irretrievable breakdown" of one of the four factors which include adultery, unreasonable behaviour, desertion and separation.[92]

South Korea

The crude divorce rate in South Korea in 2020 was 2.1.[93] Compared to prior years, the number of divorces recorded depicts that there are less filed divorces each year. Both the number of marriages and divorces decreased from 2019 by 10.7% and 3.9% respectively.[94]

The highest proportion of divorces in 2020 was amongst those who have been married for 20 years or more followed by those who have been married for four years or less.[95] Such findings may suggest that divorce has become more socially accepted in South Korea and the stigma behind separating has lessened.

Taiwan

Taiwan's divorce rate in 2020 stood at 2.19 divorces per 1,000 residents.[96] This is the lowest recorded divorce rate in the past 10 years. Many divorces in Taiwan are not done in court if there is a mutual agreement. If one of the parties does not consent to the divorce, then the other spouse may file for divorce under a valid reason of bigamy, infidelity, ill treatment or desertion. Before 2020, adultery in Taiwan was considered a crime and punishable by law.[97]

Europe

Divorce has increased across Europe in the past decade – the rate varies between European countries. One study estimated that legal reforms accounted for about 20% increase of the divorce rates in Europe between 1960 and 2002. In 2019, Luxembourg had the highest divorce rate per 100 marriages followed by Portugal, Finland, and Spain.[98] Countries in Europe with some of the lowest number of divorces per 100 marriages are Ireland and Malta.[98]

Serbia

On average, for every three new marriages in Serbia, one divorce occurs.[99] In 2019, 35,570 marriages were concluded in Serbia, 10,899 marriages were divorced, and the number of divorces per 1,000 inhabitants was 1.6%.[100]

United Kingdom

In 2015, the highest divorces rates in the UK were recorded all beside the sea, with Blackpool in the top position. The UK divorce rate is estimated at 42% and in 2019, around 107,599 divorces were reported.[101] The highest number of divorce applications are reportedly made on Divorce Day, which is always the first Monday of the new year.

North America

United States

The crude divorce rate in 2022 in the United States is 2.3 divorces. This is significantly lower than prior years, such as those in 2001 where 4.1 divorces were recorded.  These recent findings suggest a downward trend of the number of people dissolving their marriage. However, divorce rates range from state to state. It's important to look back on why prior years had such a high divorce rate amongst Americans.

The National Center for Health Statistics reports that wives, with children present, filed for divorce in approximately two-thirds of cases from 1975 to 1988 in the U.S. For example, 71.4% of the cases were filed by women in 1975 and 65% were filed by women in 1988. It is estimated that upwards of 95% of divorces in the U.S. are "uncontested", because the two parties are able to come to an agreement without a hearing (either with or without lawyers/mediators/collaborative counsel) about the property, children, and support issues.

In 2000, the divorce rate reached its peak at 40% but has since slowly declined. In 2001, marriages between people of different faiths were three times more likely to get divorced than those of the same faith. In fact, in a 1993 study, members of two mainline Protestant religions had a 20% chance of being divorced in 5 years; a 33% for a Catholic and Evangelical, and a 40% chance for a Jew and a Christian.

Couples with different ethnicities and races also had distinctive divorce statistics. In 2008, a study by Jenifer L. Bratter and Rosalind B. King on the Education Resources Information Center, found that unions between White males and non-White females as well as between Hispanics and non-Hispanic individuals, have similar or lower risks of divorce than White marriages. Unions between a White male and Black female last longer than White-White pairings or White-Asian pairings. Conversely, a White female with a Black male and White female with an Asian male are more prone to divorce than White-White pairings.

Additionally, as found in 2010, success in marriage has been associated with a higher education and older age. For example, 81% of college graduates who were over 26 years old, who wed in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Additionally, 65% of college graduates under 26, who married in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Furthermore, 49% of high school graduates under 26 years old, who married in the 1980s, were still married 20 years later. Conversely, 2.9% of adults aged 35–39 and without a college degree got divorced in the year 2009 – compared with 1.6% with a college education.

Another study looking at population differences found that a 1% increase in the unemployment rate correlated with a 1% decrease in the divorce rate. This was found to be presumably true for individuals who were financially challenged when trying to afford the legal proceedings. Nevertheless, another study from 1900 to 2008 found that there was a significant increase in the risk of divorce following a layoff and being unemployed.[102]

Oceania

Australia

The crude divorce rate in Australia in 2020 was 1.9 divorces per 1,000 residents.[103] This rate has remained somewhat consistent throughout the past few years and is the same as the previous year. However, as divorces are granted after 12 months of separation, splits during COVID may not be reflected in the current divorce rate. The divorce rate has decreased substantially over the past 20 years with 2.6 divorces recorded per 1,000 residents in 2000.[103] In order to apply for divorce, one must be separated for at least 12 months.

New Zealand

New Zealand's divorce rate in 2020 was 7.6 divorces per 1,000 residents.[104] This rate marks a decrease from previous years – such as those in 1983 with a crude divorce rate of 13.3. In fact, this rate has decreased significantly from the previous year, 2019, with a divorce rate of 8.4.[104] Before filing for divorced, one must be separated for at least two years.[105] After this time, one is eligible to submit an application. If it is a joint application, divorce will take effect after one month.[105] If one applies as a sole application, then the other spouse has the opportunity to defend it within a certain time period. Additionally, if individuals appear in court together and the judge files the divorce order, then the divorce will effective immediately.

Africa

South Africa

According to Statistics South Africa, the number of divorces increased by 0.3% from 25,260 divorces granted in 2015 to 25,326 granted in 2016. About 44.4% of the 2016 divorces came from marriages that did not reach their tenth wedding anniversary. About 51.1% of divorces in 2016 were filed by women while men filed 34.2% divorce cases.[106]

Social attitudes

Attitudes toward divorce vary substantially across the world. Divorce is considered socially unacceptable by most of the population in certain Sub-Saharan African countries such as Ghana, Uganda, Nigeria and Kenya, South Asian countries including India and Pakistan and South-East Asian countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia. The majority of the population considers divorce acceptable in Eastern Europe, East Asia, Latin America and the United States. In developed regions such as Western Europe and Japan, more than 80% of the population consider divorce socially acceptable. Divorce is also widely accepted in certain Muslim majority countries such as Jordan, Egypt and Lebanon, at least when men initiate it.[107]

In same-sex married couples (United States)

All U.S. states permit same-sex marriage. For same-sex couples in the United States, divorce law is in its infancy.

Rights of spouses to custody of children

Upon dissolution of a same-sex marriage, legal questions remain as to the rights of spouses to custody of the biological children of their spouses.[108] Unresolved legal questions abound in this area.[109]

Child custody policies include several guidelines that determine with whom the child lives following divorce, how time is divided in joint custody situations, and visitation rights. The most frequently applied custody guideline is the best interests of the child standard, which takes into account the parents' preferences, the child's preferences, the interactions between parents and children, children's adjustment, and all family members' mental and physical health.[110]

Religion and divorce

 
Cartoon parodying the circus-like divorce proceedings of Anna Gould (an American heiress and socialite) and Boni de Castellane (a French nobleman)[111] in 1906 in Paris, France.[112] Boni de Castellane then sought an annulment from the Vatican so that he could be free to remarry in the Church. The annulment case was not finally settled until 1924, when the highest Vatican tribunal upheld the validity of the marriage and denied the annulment.

In some countries (commonly in Europe and North America), the government defines and administers marriages and divorces. While ceremonies may be performed by religious officials on behalf of the state, a civil marriage and thus, civil divorce (without the involvement of a religion) is also possible. Due to differing standards and procedures, a couple can be legally unmarried, married, or divorced by the state's definition, but have a different status as defined by a religious order. Other countries use religious law to administer marriages and divorces, eliminating this distinction. In these cases, religious officials are generally responsible for interpretation and implementation.

Islam allows, yet generally advises against divorce, and it can be initiated by either the husband or the wife.[113]

Dharmic religions allow divorce under some circumstances.[114]

Christian views on divorce vary: Catholic teaching allows only annulment, while most other denominations discourage it except in the event of adultery. For example, the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection, in its 2014 Discipline, teaches:[115]

We believe that the only legitimate marriage is the joining of one man and one woman (Gen. 2:24; Rom. 7:2; 1 Cor. 7:10; Eph. 5:22, 23). We deplore the evils of divorce and remarriage. We regard adultery as the only scripturally justifiable grounds for divorce; and the party guilty of adultery has by his or her act forfeited membership in the church. In the case of divorce for other cause, neither party shall be permitted to marry again during the lifetime of the other; and violation of this law shall be punished by expulsion from the church (Matt. 5:32; Mark 10:11, 12). In the carrying out of these principles, guilt shall be established in accordance with judicial procedures set forth in The Discipline.[115]

Jewish views of divorce differ, with Reform Judaism considering civil divorces adequate; Conservative and Orthodox Judaism, on the other hand, require that the husband grant his wife a divorce in the form of a get.

The Millet System, where each religious group regulates its own marriages and divorces, is still present in varying degrees in some post−Ottoman countries including Iraq, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Israel, the Palestinian Authority and Egypt. Several countries use sharia (Islamic law) to administrate marriages and divorces for Muslims. Thus, Marriage in Israel is administered separately by each religious community (Jews, Christians, Muslims, and Druze), and there is no provision for interfaith marriages other than marrying in another country. For Jews, marriage and divorce are administered by Orthodox rabbis. Partners can file for divorce either in rabbinical court or Israeli civil court.[116]

Gender and divorce

According to a study published in the American Law and Economics Review, women have filed slightly more than two-thirds of divorce cases in the United States.[117] This trend is mirrored in the UK where a recent study into web search behavior found that 70% of divorce inquiries were from women. These findings also correlate with the Office for National Statistics publication "Divorces in England and Wales 2012[118] which reported that divorce petitions from women outnumber those from men by 2 to 1.

Regarding divorce settlements, according to the 2004 Grant Thornton survey in the UK, women obtained a better or considerably better settlement than men in 60% of cases. In 30% of cases the assets were split 50–50, and in only 10% of cases did men achieve better settlements (down from 24% the previous year). The report concluded that the percentage of shared residence orders would need to increase in order for more equitable financial divisions to become the norm.[50]

Some jurisdictions give unequal rights to men and women when filing for divorce.[citation needed]

For couples to Conservative or Orthodox Jewish law (which by Israeli civil law includes all Jews in Israel), the husband must grant his wife a divorce through a document called a get. Granting the 'get' obligates him to pay the woman a significant sum of money(10,000-$20,000) as stated on the religious prenuptial contract, which can be in addition to whatever prior settlement he had reached as far as continuous child support and funds he had to pay by court order in the civil divorce. If the man refuses, (and agreeing on condition he will not have to pay the money is still called refusing), the woman can appeal to a court or the community to pressure the husband. A woman whose husband refuses to grant the get or a woman whose husband is missing without sufficient knowledge that he died, is called an agunah, is still married, and therefore cannot remarry. Under Orthodox law, children of an extramarital affair involving a married Jewish woman are considered mamzerim and cannot marry non-mamzerim.[116]

History

Greco-Roman culture

 
Roman married couple.

The ancient Athenians liberally allowed divorce, but the person requesting divorce had to submit the request to a magistrate, and the magistrate could determine whether the reasons given were sufficient.

Divorce was rare in early Roman culture but as their empire grew in power and authority Roman civil law embraced the maxim, "matrimonia debent esse libera" ("marriages ought to be free"), and either husband or wife could renounce the marriage at will. The Christian emperors Constantine and Theodosius restricted the grounds for divorce to grave cause, but this was relaxed by Justinian in the 6th century.

Mali Empire

In post-classical Mali, laws relating to divorced women were documented in the Timbuktu manuscripts.[119]

Medieval Europe

After the fall of the Roman Empire, familial life was regulated more by ecclesiastical authority than civil authority. The Catholic and Orthodox Church had, among others, a differing view of divorce.

The Orthodox Church recognized that there are rare occasions when it is better that couples do separate. For the Orthodox, to say that marriage is indissoluble means that it should not be broken, the violation of such a union, perceived as holy, being an offense resulting from either adultery or the prolonged absence of one of the partners. Thus, permitting remarriage is an act of compassion of the Church towards sinful man.[120]

Under the influence of the Catholic Church, the divorce rate had been greatly reduced by the 9th or 10th century,[121] which considered marriage a sacrament instituted by Jesus Christ and indissoluble by mere human action.[122]

Although divorce, as known today, was generally prohibited in Catholic lands after the 10th century, separation of husband and wife and the annulment of marriage were well-known. What is today referred to as "separate maintenance" (or "legal separation") was termed "divorce a mensa et thoro" ("divorce from bed-and-board"). The husband and wife physically separated and were forbidden to live or cohabit together, but their marital relationship did not fully terminate.[123] Civil courts had no power over marriage or divorce. The grounds for annulment were determined by a Catholic church authority and applied in ecclesiastical courts. Annulment was for canonical causes of impediment existing at the time of the marriage. "For in cases of total divorce, the marriage is declared null, as having been absolutely unlawful ab initio."[124][125][126] The Catholic Church held that the sacrament of marriage produced one person from two, inseparable from each other: "By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law: that is, the very being of legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage or at least incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband: under whose wing, protection and cover, she performs everything."[127] Since husband and wife became one person upon marriage, recognition of that oneness could be rescinded only on the grounds that the unity never existed to begin with, i.e., that the proclamation of marriage was erroneous and void from the start.

Secularisation in Europe

 
Henry VIII of England broke with the Catholic Church in order to obtain an annulment.

After the Reformation, marriage came to be considered a contract in the newly Protestant regions of Europe, and on that basis, civil authorities gradually asserted their power to decree a "divortium a vinculo matrimonii", or "divorce from all the bonds of marriage".

Since no precedents existed defining the circumstances under which marriage could be dissolved, civil courts heavily relied on the previous determinations of the ecclesiastic courts and freely adopted the requirements set down by those courts. As the civil courts assumed the power to dissolve marriages, courts still strictly construed the circumstances under which they would grant a divorce,[128] and considered divorce to be contrary to public policy. Because divorce was considered to be against the public interest, civil courts refused to grant a divorce if evidence revealed any hint of complicity between the husband and wife to divorce, or if they attempted to manufacture grounds for a divorce. Divorce was granted only because one party to the marriage had violated a sacred vow to the "innocent spouse". If both husband and wife were guilty, "neither would be allowed to escape the bonds of marriage".[129]

Eventually, the idea that a marriage could be dissolved in cases in which one of the parties violated the sacred vow gradually allowed expansion of the grounds upon which divorce could be granted from those grounds which existed at the time of the marriage to grounds which occurred after the marriage, but which exemplified violation of that vow, such as abandonment, adultery, or "extreme cruelty".[130] An exception to this trend was the Anglican Church, which maintained the doctrine of marital indissolubility.

During the English Civil War, the Puritans briefly passed a law that divested marriage of all sacrament, leaving it as a secular contract that could be broken. John Milton wrote four divorce tracts in 1643–1645 that argued for the legitimacy of divorce on grounds of spousal incompatibility. His ideas were ahead of their time; arguing for divorce at all, let alone a version of no-fault divorce, was extremely controversial and religious figures sought to ban his tracts.[131] In 1670 a precedent was first set with an Act of Parliament allowing Lord John Manners to divorce his wife, Lady Anne Pierrepont, and until the passage of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857, divorce could only be obtained through a specific Act of Parliament.[132]

 
Joséphine, first wife of Napoleon, obtained the civil dissolution of her marriage under the Napoleonic Code of 1804.

The move towards secularisation and liberalisation was reinforced by the individualistic and secular ideals of the Enlightenment. The Enlightened absolutist, King Frederick II ("the Great") of Prussia decreed a new divorce law in 1752, in which marriage was declared to be a purely private concern, allowing divorce to be granted on the basis of mutual consent. This new attitude heavily influenced the law in neighbouring Austria under Emperor Joseph II, where it was applied to all non-Catholic Imperial subjects.[133] Divorce was legalised in France after the French revolution on a similar basis, although the legal order of the ancien regime was reinstated at the Bourbon restoration of 1816. The trend in Europe throughout the 19th century, was one of increased liberalisation; by the mid-19th century, divorce was generally granted by civil courts in the case of adultery.

 
Marilyn Monroe signing divorce papers with celebrity attorney Jerry Giesler.

In Britain, before 1857 wives were regarded as under the economic and legal protection of their husbands, and divorce was almost impossible. It required a very expensive private Act of Parliament costing perhaps £200, of the sort only the richest could possibly afford. It was very difficult to secure divorce on the grounds of adultery, desertion, or cruelty. The first key legislative victory came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857, which passed over the strenuous opposition of the highly traditional Church of England. The new law made divorce a civil affair of the courts, rather than a Church matter, with a new civil court in London handling all cases. The process was still quite expensive, at about £40, but now became feasible for the middle class. A woman who obtained a judicial separation took the status of a feme sole, with full control of her own civil rights. Additional amendments came in 1878, which allowed for separations handled by local justices of the peace. The Church of England blocked further reforms until the final breakthrough came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.[134][135]

In Spain, the 1931 Constitution of the Second Spanish Republic for the first time recognised a right to divorce. The first law to regulate divorce was the Divorce Act of 1932, which passed the Republican Parliament despite the opposition of the Catholic Church and a coalition of the Agrarian Minority and Minority Basque-Navarre Catholic parties. The dictatorship of General Franco abolished the law. After the restoration of democracy, a new divorce law was passed in 1981, again over the opposition of the Catholic Church and part of the Christian Democrat party, then a part of the ruling Union of Democratic Center. During the first socialist government of Felipe González Márquez, the 1981 law was amended to expedite the process of separation and divorce of marriages, which was again opposed by the Church, which called it "express divorce".

In Italy, the first divorce law was introduced on 1 December 1970, despite the opposition of the Christian Democrats,[136] and entered into force on 18 December 1970. In the following years, the Christian Democrats, supported also by parties opposed to the law, promoted a recall referendum. In 1974, in a referendum, the majority of the population voted against a repeal of the divorce law. A feature of the 1970 divorce law was the long period of marital separation of five years required. This period was reduced to three in 1987 and to a year in 2015, in the case of judicial separation, and six months in the case of separation by mutual agreement.

Ireland and Malta approved divorce at referendums in 1995 and 2011 respectively.

Divorce rates increased markedly during the 20th century in developed countries, as social attitudes towards family and sex changed dramatically.[137] Divorce has become commonplace in some countries, including the United States,[138] Canada, Australia, Germany, New Zealand, Scandinavia, and the United Kingdom.[139]

Japan

In the Edo Period (1603–1868), husbands could divorce their wives by writing letters of divorce. Frequently, their relatives or marriage arrangers kept these letters and tried to restore the marriages. Wives could not divorce their husbands. Some wives were able to gain sanctuary in certain Shinto "divorce temples". After a wife had spent three years in a temple, her husband was required to divorce her.[140] In 19th century Japan, at least one in eight marriages ended in divorce.

There are four types of divorce in Japan: divorce by agreement in which the divorce is mutual; divorce by mediation, which happens in family court; divorce by decision of family court that takes place when a couple cannot complete a divorce through mediation; and divorce by judgment of a district court.[141]

India

On a national level, the Special Marriage Act, passed in 1954, is an inter-religious marriage law permitting Indian nationals to marry and divorce irrespective of their religion or faith. The Hindu Marriage Act, in 1955 which legally permitted divorce to Hindus and other communities who chose to marry under these acts. The Indian Divorce Act 1869[142] is the law relating to the divorce of person professing the Christian religion. Divorce can be sought by a husband or wife on grounds including adultery, cruelty, desertion for two years, religious conversion, mental abnormality, venereal disease, and leprosy.[143] Divorce is also available based on mutual consent of both the spouses, which can be filed after at least one year of separated living. Mutual consent divorce can not be appealed, and the law mandates a minimum period of six months (from the time divorce is applied for) for divorce to be granted.[144] Contested divorce is when one of the spouse is not willing to divorce the other spouse, under such condition the divorce is granted only on certain grounds according to the Hindu marriage act of 1955. While a Muslim husband can unilaterally bring an end to the marriage by pronouncing talaq,[145] Muslim women must go to court, claiming any of the grounds provided under the Dissolution of Muslim Marriage Act.[146]

In the first major family law reform in the last decade, the Supreme Court of India banned the Islamic practice of "Triple Talaq" (divorce by uttering of the "Talaq" word thrice by the husband). The landmark Supreme Court of India judgment was welcomed by women activists across India.[147]

Official figures of divorce rates are not available, but it has been estimated that 1 in 100 or another figure of 11 in 1,000 marriages in India end up in divorce.[148]

Various communities are governed by specific marital legislation, distinct to Hindu Marriage Act, and consequently have their own divorce laws:

  • The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936[149]
  • The Dissolution of Muslim Marriage act, 1939[150]
  • The Foreign Marriage Act, 1969[151]
  • The Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986[152]

An amendment to the marriage laws to allow divorce based on "irretrievable breakdown of marriage" (as alleged by one of the spouses) is under consideration in India.[153] In June 2010, the Union Cabinet of India approved the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Bill 2010, which, if cleared by Parliament, would establish "irretrievable breakdown" as a new ground for divorce.[154] Under the proposed amendment, the court before proceeding to the merits of the case must be satisfied by the evidences produced that parties have been living apart for a continuous period of not less than three years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition.[155]

Islamic law

Divorce in Islam can take a variety of forms, some initiated by the husband and some initiated by the wife. The main traditional legal categories are talaq (repudiation), khulʿ (mutual divorce/annulment), judicial divorce and oaths. The theory and practice of divorce in the Islamic world have varied according to time and place.[156] Historically, the rules of divorce were governed by sharia, as interpreted by traditional Islamic jurisprudence, and they differed depending on the legal school.[157] Historical practice sometimes diverged from legal theory.[157] In modern times, as personal status (family) laws were codified, they generally remained "within the orbit of Islamic law", but control over the norms of divorce shifted from traditional jurists to the state.[156]

Philippines

Divorce as a means of terminating marriage is illegal for all Filipinos except Filipino Muslims. There is only civil annulment after a lengthy legal separation. The process is costly and long, and there are many legally married couples in extramarital relations, even without a divorce law.

Code of Muslim Personal Laws of the Philippines, known as Presidential Decree (PD) No. 1083, Title II- Marriage and Divorce, Chapter 3-Divorce allows for divorce recognized by the state. There are two sharia courts in the Philippine judicial system that hear these cases.

On 27 July 2010, Gabriela Women's Party filed in Congress House Bill No 1799, or the Divorce Bill of the Philippines, as one of many attempts to introduce pro-divorce legislation. Senator Pia Cayetano has filed a separate divorce bill in the Senate. During that time, the Philippines, along with Malta and the Vatican, are the three most conservative countries on the issue of divorce. The bill did not pass any level of legislation because of this.

In 2013, the divorce bill was refiled, however, did not pass any level of legislation as well.

In a latest attempt, the divorce bill was refiled again in 2017. On 22 February 2018, the House of Representatives committee on population and family relations approved a bill seeking to legalize divorce, the first time in Philippine history for such a measure to pass the committee level of legislation. The majority of the members of the House of Representatives (lower house of Congress), both majority and minority blocs, are in favor of divorce, however, divorce continues to be a divisive issue in the Senate (upper house of Congress), as stark opposition is present among male senators.[158][159]

Patterns

Divorce rates increase during times of hardship, war, and major events. Divorce rates increased after World War II because people were quick to marry each other before they went to war. When soldiers returned, they found out that they did not have much in common with their spouses, so they divorced.[160]

See also

References

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Suggested reading

  • Alford, William P., , in Realms of Freedom in Modern China (William C. Kirby ed., Stanford University Press, 2004).
  • Berlin, G. (2004). "The Effects of Marriage and Divorce on Families and Children".
  • Davies, P. T. & Cummings E. M. (1994). . American Psychological Association Psychological Bulletin, 116, 387–411.
  • Foulkes-Jamison, L. (2001). .
  • Hughes R. (2009). The Effects of Divorce on Children 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • Phillips, Roderick (1991). Untying the knot: a short history of divorce. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-42370-0.
  • Singer, Joseph William (2005). "Same Sex Marriage, Full Faith and Credit, and the Evasion of Obligation". Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties. 1: 1–51.
  • Strong, B., DeVault C., & Cohen T. F. (2011). The Marriage and Family Experience: Intimate Relationships in a Changing Society. Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
  • Thomas, S. G. (28 October 2011). The Good Divorce. The New York Times
  • Zartler U., Heinz-Martin, V., Arránz Becker, O. (Edts.) (2015): Family Dynamics after Separation. A Life Course Perspective on Post-Divorce Families. Special Issue ZfF, Volume 10, Opladen/Toronto: Barbara Budrich. ISBN 978-3-8474-0686-0.
  • Fawcett, Margaret I. (2016). "The Changing Family in Northern Ireland". Youth & Society. 32: 81–106. doi:10.1177/0044118X00032001005. S2CID 146282562.

External links

  • Societal aspects of divorce at Curlie
  • Legal aspects of divorce at Curlie
  • Marriage and divorce statistics, Eurostat – Statistics Explained

divorce, this, article, about, dissolution, marriage, other, uses, disambiguation, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, wife, redirects, here, series, wife, series, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, . This article is about dissolution of marriage For other uses see Divorce disambiguation Divorcee redirects here For other uses see Divorcee disambiguation Ex wife redirects here For the TV series see Ex Wife TV series This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Divorce news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to self published sources Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Divorce also known as dissolution of marriage is the process of terminating a marriage or marital union 1 Divorce usually entails the canceling or reorganizing of the legal duties and responsibilities of marriage thus dissolving the bonds of matrimony between a married couple under the rule of law of the particular country or state It can be said to be a legal dissolution of a marriage by a court or other competent body 2 It is the legal process of ending a marriage 3 In the United States divorce is governed by state law so the specific requirements and procedures vary by state Generally a divorce is initiated by one spouse filing a petition for divorce with the court The other spouse must be served with notice of the petition and he or she has the right to respond with an answer or counter petition Depending on the state the parties may also be required to attend mediation or a settlement conference in order to resolve any issues After the issues have been resolved the court will enter a judgment of divorce which officially terminates the marriage Divorce can involve a variety of issues including but not limited to child custody child support spousal support division of property and allocation of debt Depending on the state the court may also consider the parties financial resources and the standard of living during marriage when making decisions regarding alimony Divorce laws vary considerably around the world 1 but in most countries divorce requires the sanction of a court or other authority in a legal process which may involve issues of distribution of property 4 child custody 4 alimony spousal support child visitation access parenting time child support and division of debt In most countries monogamy is required by law so divorce allows each former partner to marry another person Divorce is different from annulment which declares the marriage null and void with legal separation or de jure separation a legal process by which a married couple may formalize a de facto separation while remaining legally married or with de facto separation a process where the spouses informally stop cohabiting Reasons for divorce vary from sexual incompatibility or lack of independence for one or both spouses to a personality clash or infidelity 5 The only countries that do not allow divorce are the Philippines and the Vatican City In the Philippines divorce for non Muslim Filipinos is not legal unless the husband or wife is an undocumented immigrant and satisfies certain conditions 6 The Vatican City is a state ruled by the head of the Catholic Church a religion that does not allow for divorce Countries that have relatively recently legalized divorce are Italy 1970 Portugal 1975 although from 1910 to 1940 it was possible both for the civil and religious marriage Brazil 1977 Spain 1981 Argentina 1987 7 Paraguay 1991 8 Colombia 1991 from 1976 was allowed only for non Catholics 8 Andorra 1995 9 Ireland 1996 Chile 2004 10 and Malta 2011 Contents 1 Overview 2 Law 2 1 Types 2 1 1 Contested divorce 2 1 2 At fault divorce 2 1 3 Summary divorce 2 1 4 No fault divorce 2 1 5 Uncontested divorce 2 1 6 Collaborative divorce 2 1 7 Electronic divorce 2 1 8 Mediated divorce 3 Polygamy and divorce 4 Causes 5 Effects 5 1 Divorce and relationships 5 2 Effects on children 5 2 1 Psychological 5 2 2 Academic and socioeconomic 5 3 Divorce of elderly couples 6 Statistics 6 1 Asia 6 1 1 China 6 1 2 India 6 1 3 Indonesia 6 1 4 Japan 6 1 5 Singapore 6 1 6 South Korea 6 1 7 Taiwan 6 2 Europe 6 2 1 Serbia 6 2 2 United Kingdom 6 3 North America 6 3 1 United States 6 4 Oceania 6 4 1 Australia 6 4 2 New Zealand 6 5 Africa 6 5 1 South Africa 7 Social attitudes 8 In same sex married couples United States 8 1 Rights of spouses to custody of children 9 Religion and divorce 10 Gender and divorce 11 History 11 1 Greco Roman culture 11 2 Mali Empire 11 3 Medieval Europe 11 4 Secularisation in Europe 11 5 Japan 11 6 India 11 7 Islamic law 11 8 Philippines 12 Patterns 13 See also 14 References 15 Suggested reading 16 External linksOverview EditGrounds for divorce vary widely from country to country Marriage may be seen as a contract a status or a combination of these 11 Where it is seen as a contract the refusal or inability of one spouse to perform the obligations stipulated in the contract may constitute a ground for divorce for the other spouse In contrast in some countries such as Sweden 12 Finland 13 Australia 14 New Zealand 15 divorce is purely no fault This means it does not matter what the reasons are that a party or parties want to separate They can separate of their own free will without having to prove someone is at fault for the divorce Many jurisdictions offer both the option of a no fault divorce as well as an at fault divorce This is the case for example in many states of the US France and the Czech Republic 16 Though divorce laws vary between jurisdictions there are two basic approaches to divorce fault based and no fault based However even in some jurisdictions that do not require a party to claim fault of their partner a court may still take into account the behavior of the parties when dividing property debts evaluating custody shared care arrangements and support In some jurisdictions one spouse may be forced to pay the attorney s fees of another spouse 17 Laws vary as to the waiting period before a divorce is effective Also residency requirements vary However issues of division of property are typically determined by the law of the jurisdiction in which the property is located 18 In Europe divorce laws differ from country to country reflecting differing legal and cultural traditions In some countries particularly but not only in some former communist countries divorce can be obtained only on one single general ground of irretrievable breakdown of the marriage or a similar formulation Yet what constitutes such a breakdown of the marriage is interpreted very differently from jurisdiction to jurisdiction ranging from very liberal interpretations e g Netherlands 19 to quite restrictive ones e g in Poland there must be an irretrievable and complete disintegration of matrimonial life but there are many restrictions to granting a divorce 20 21 Separation constitutes a ground of divorce in some European countries in Germany e g a divorce is granted on the basis of a 1 year separation if both spouses consent or 3 year separation if only one spouse consents 22 Note that separation does not necessarily mean separate residences in some jurisdictions living in the same household but leading a separate life e g eating sleeping socializing etc separately is sufficient to constitute de facto separation this is explicitly stated e g in the family laws of Latvia 23 or the Czech Republic 16 Divorce laws are not static they often change reflecting evolving social norms of societies In the 21st century many European countries have made changes to their divorce laws in particular by reducing the length of the necessary periods of separation e g Scotland in 2006 1 or 2 years from the previous 2 or 5 years France in 2005 2 years from the previous 6 years 24 Switzerland in 2005 2 years from the previous 4 years 25 Greece in 2008 2 years from the previous 4 years 26 Some countries have completely overhauled their divorce laws such as Spain in 2005 27 and Portugal in 2008 A new divorce law also came into force in September 2007 in Belgium creating a new system that is primarily no fault 28 Bulgaria also modified its divorce regulations in 2009 Also in Italy new laws came into force in 2014 and 2015 with significant changes in Italian law in matter of divorce apart from shortening of the period of obligatory separation 6 months for consensual separations and 1 year for contested ones from the previous 3 years are allowed other forms of getting a divorce as an alternative to court proceedings i e the negotiations with the participation of an advocate or agreement made before the registrar of Public Registry Office 29 Austria by contrast is a European country where the divorce law still remains conservative 30 The liberalization of divorce laws is not without opposition particularly in the United States citation needed Indeed in the US certain conservative and religious organizations are lobbying for laws which restrict divorce In 2011 in the US the Coalition for Divorce Reform was established describing itself as an organization dedicated to supporting efforts to reduce unnecessary divorce and promote healthy marriages 31 undue weight discuss The magisterium of the Roman Catholic Church founds the concept of marriage on natural moral law elaborated by St Thomas Aquinas supplemented by the revealed Divine law The doctrine of the Doctor Angelicus has been partially shared by the Eastern Orthodox Church in the course of history 32 Law EditSee also Divorce law by country Types Edit In some jurisdictions the courts will seldom apply principles of fault but might willingly hold a party liable for a breach of a fiduciary duty to his or her spouse Grounds for divorce differs from jurisdiction to jurisdiction in the worldwide Some states have no fault divorce some states require a declaration of fault on the part of one partner or both some states allow either method 33 In most jurisdictions a divorce must be certified or ordered by a Judge in a court of law to come into effect The terms of the divorce are usually determined by the courts though they may take into account prenuptial agreements or post nuptial agreements or ratify terms that the spouses may have agreed to privately while in other areas agreements related to the marriage have to be rendered in writing to be enforceable In the absence of agreement a contested divorce may be stressful to the spouses In some countries where when the spouses agree to divorce and to the terms of the divorce it can be certified by a non judiciary administrative entity The effect of a divorce is that both parties are free to marry again if a filing in an appellate court does not overturn the decision Contested divorce Edit Contested divorces mean that one of several issues are required to be heard by a judge at trial level this is more expensive and the parties will have to pay for a lawyer s time and preparation In such a divorce the spouses are not able to agree on issues for instance child custody and division of marital assets In such situations the litigation process takes longer to conclude 34 The judge controls the outcome of the case Less adversarial approaches to divorce settlements have recently emerged such as mediation and collaborative divorce settlement which negotiate mutually acceptable resolution to conflicts This principle in the United States is called Alternative Dispute Resolution and has gained popularity At fault divorce Edit Before the late 1960s nearly all countries that permitted divorce required proof by one party that the other party had committed an act incompatible with the marriage This was termed grounds for divorce popularly called fault and was the only way to terminate a marriage No fault divorce is available in Australia New Zealand Canada the United States and other Western countries Fault based divorces can be contested evaluation of offences may involve allegations of collusion of the parties working together to get the divorce or condonation by approving the offence connivance by tricking someone into committing an offence or provocation by the other party Contested fault divorces can be expensive and not usually practical as eventually most divorces are granted Comparative rectitude is a doctrine used to determine which spouse is more at fault when both spouses are guilty of breaches 35 The grounds for a divorce which a party could raise and need to prove included desertion abandonment cruelty or adultery The requirement of proving a ground was revised and withdrawn by the terms of no fault statutes which became popular in many Western countries in the late 1960s and early 1970s In no fault jurisdictions divorce can be obtained either on a simple allegation of irreconcilable differences irretrievable break down or incompatibility with respect to the marriage relationship or on the ground of de facto separation Summary divorce Edit A summary or simpledivorce available in some jurisdictions which is used when spouses meet certain eligibility requirements or can agree on key issues beforehand Key factors Short duration of marriage less than five years Absence of children or in some jurisdictions prior allocation of child custody and of child support direction and amount Absence or minimal value of real property at issue and any associated encumbrances such as mortgages Absence of agreed as marital property above a given value threshold around 35 000 not including vehicles Absence with respect to each spouse of claims to personal property above a given value threshold typically the same as that for total marital property with such claims including claims to exclusive previous ownership of property described by the other spouse as maritalNo fault divorce Edit Most Western jurisdictions have a no fault divorce system which requires no allegation or proof of fault of either party 36 The barest of assertions suffice For example in countries that require irretrievable breakdown the mere assertion that the marriage has broken down will satisfy the judicial officer In other jurisdictions requiring irreconcilable differences the mere allegation that the marriage has been irreparable by these differences is enough for granting a divorce Courts will not inquire into facts A yes is enough even if the other party vehemently says no The application can be made by either party or by both parties jointly In jurisdictions adopting the no fault principle regarding whether to grant a divorce some courts may still take into account the fault of the parties when determining some aspects of the content of the divorce decree e g its terms for the division of property and debts and the absence or amount of spousal support Provisions related to child custody are determined using a different fundamental standard the child s or children s best interests At the same time some behaviors that may constitute marital fault e g violence cruelty endangerment neglect or substance abuse may also qualify as factors to be considered when determining child custody they do so for the independent reason that they provide evidence as to what arrangement is in the child s or children s best interests in the future Uncontested divorce Edit It is estimated that upwards of 95 of divorces in the U S are uncontested 37 because the two parties are able to come to an agreement either with or without lawyers mediators collaborative counsel about the property children and support issues When the parties can agree and present the court with a fair and equitable agreement approval of the divorce is typically guaranteed If the two parties cannot come to an agreement they may ask the court to decide how to split property and deal with the custody of their children Though this may be necessary the courts would prefer parties to come to an agreement prior to entering court Where the issues are not complex and the parties are cooperative a settlement often can be directly negotiated between them In the majority of cases forms are acquired from their respective state websites and a filing fee is paid to the state 38 Most U S states charge between 175 and 350 for a simple divorce filing 39 40 41 Collaborative divorce and mediated divorce are considered uncontested divorces In the United States many state court systems are experiencing an increasing proportion of pro se i e litigants represent themselves without a lawyer in divorce cases 42 In San Diego for example the number of divorce filings involving at least one self representing litigant rose from 46 in 1992 to 77 in 2000 and in Florida from 66 in 1999 to 73 in 2001 Urban courts in California report that approximately 80 of the new divorce filings are filed pro se 43 Collaborative divorce Edit Collaborative divorce is a method for divorcing couples to come to an agreement on divorce issues In a collaborative divorce the parties negotiate an agreed resolution with the assistance of attorneys who are trained in the collaborative divorce process and in mediation and often with the assistance of a neutral financial specialist or divorce coaches The parties are empowered to make their own decisions based on their own needs and interests but with complete information and full professional support Once the collaborative divorce starts the lawyers are disqualified from representing the parties in a contested legal proceeding should the collaborative law process end prematurely Most attorneys who practise collaborative divorce claim that it can be more cost effective than other divorce methods e g going to court 44 Electronic divorce Edit Portugal for example allows two persons to file an electronic request for no fault collaborative divorce in a non judiciary administrative entity In specific cases with no children real property alimony or common address can be completed within one hour citation needed 45 46 Mediated divorce Edit Divorce mediation is an alternative to traditional divorce litigation In a divorce mediation session a mediator facilitates the discussion between the two parties by assisting with communication and providing information and suggestions to help resolve differences At the end of the mediation process the separating parties have typically developed a tailored divorce agreement that can be submitted to the court Mediation sessions can include either party s attorneys a neutral attorney or an attorney mediator who can inform both parties of their legal rights but does not provide advice to either or can be conducted with the assistance of a facilitative or transformative mediator without attorneys present at all Some mediation companies such as Wevorce also pair clients with counselors financial planners and other professionals to work through common mediation sticking points 47 Divorce mediators may be attorneys who have experience in divorce cases or they may be professional mediators who are not attorneys but who have training specifically in the area of family court matters Divorce mediation can be significantly less costly both financially and emotionally than litigation The adherence rate to mediated agreements is much higher than that of adherence to court orders 48 Polygamy and divorce EditPolygyny is a significant structural factor governing divorce in countries where this is permitted Little to no analysis has been completed to explicitly explain the link between marital instability and polygyny which leads to divorce The frequency of divorce rises in polygynous marriages compared to monogamous relationships Within polygynous unions differences in conjugal stability are found to occur by wife order There are 3 main mechanisms through which polygyny affects divorce economic restraint sexual satisfaction and childlessness Many women escape economic restraint through divorcing their spouses when they are allowed to initiate a divorce 49 Just Divorced hand written on an automobile s rear window Causes EditAn annual study in the UK by management consultants Grant Thornton estimates the main proximal causes of divorce based on surveys of matrimonial lawyers 50 The main causes in 2004 were Adultery Extramarital sex Infidelity 27 Domestic violence 17 Midlife crisis 13 Addictions e g alcoholism and gambling 6 Workaholism 6 Other factors 31 According to this survey husbands engaged in extramarital affairs in 75 of cases and wives in 25 In cases of family strain wives families were the primary source of strain in 78 compared to 22 of husbands families Emotional and physical abuse were more evenly split with wives affected in 60 and husbands in 40 of cases In 70 of workaholism related divorces it was husbands who were the cause and in 30 wives The 2004 survey found that 93 of divorce cases were petitioned by wives very few of which were contested 53 of divorces were marriages that had lasted 10 to 15 years with 40 ending after 5 to 10 years The first 5 years are relatively divorce free and if a marriage survives more than 20 years it is unlikely to end in divorce Social scientists study the causes of divorce in terms of underlying factors that may motivate divorce One of these factors is the age at which a person gets married delaying marriage may provide more opportunity or experience in choosing a compatible partner 51 52 Wage income and sex ratios are other such underlying factors that have been included in analyses by sociologists and economists 53 54 The elevation of divorce rates among couples who cohabited before marriage is called the cohabitation effect Evidence suggests that although this correlation is partly due to two forms of selection a that persons whose moral or religious codes permit cohabitation are also more likely to consider divorce permitted by morality or religion and b that marriage based on low levels of commitment is more common among couples who cohabit than among couples who do not such that the mean and median levels of commitment at the start of marriage are lower among cohabiting than among non cohabiting couples the cohabitation experience itself exerts at least some independent effect on the subsequent marital union 55 In 2010 a study by Jay Teachman published in Journal of Marriage and Family found that women who have cohabited or had premarital sex with men other than their husbands have an increased risk of divorce and that this effect is strongest for women who have cohabited with multiple men before marriage To Teachman the fact that the elevated risk of divorce is only experienced when the premarital partner s is someone other than the husband indicates that premarital sex and cohabitation are now a normal part of the courtship process in the United States 56 This study only considers data on women in the 1995 National Survey of Family Growth in the United States Divorce is sometimes caused by one of the partners finding the other unattractive 57 Recent studies show that the cohabitation effect on divorce varies across different cultures and periods Another article published in Journal of Marriage and Family found that when cohabitation was uncommon in pre reform China premarital cohabitation increased the likelihood of subsequent divorce but this association disappeared when cohabitation became prevalent 58 Effects EditSome of the effects associated with divorce include academic behavioral and psychological problems Although this may not always be true studies suggest that children from divorced families are more likely to exhibit such behavioral issues than non divorced families 59 Divorce and relationships Edit Research done at Northern Illinois University on Family and Child Studies suggests that divorce of couples experiencing high conflict can positively affect families by reducing conflict in the home There are however many instances when the parent child relationship may suffer due to divorce Financial support is many times lost when an adult goes through a divorce The adult may be obligated to obtain additional work to maintain financial stability This can lead to a negative relationship between the parent and child the relationship may suffer due to a lack of attention towards the child and minimal parental supervision 59 Studies have also shown that parental skills decrease after a divorce occurs however this effect is only a temporary change Many researchers have shown that a disequilibrium including diminished parenting skills occurs in the year following the divorce but that by two years after the divorce re stabilization has occurred and parenting skills have improved 60 Some couples choose divorce even when one spouse s desire to remain married is greater than the other spouse s desire to obtain a divorce In economics this is known as the Zelder Paradox and is more familiar with marriages that have produced children and less common with childless couples 61 Research has also found that recent divorcees report significantly higher hostility levels after the divorce than before and that this effect applies equally to both male and female divorcees 62 In an American Psychological Association study of parents relocation after a divorce researchers found that a move has a long term effect on children In the first study conducted amongst 2 000 college students on the effects of parental relocation relating to their children s well being after divorce researchers found major differences In divorced families in which one parent moved the students received less financial support from their parents compared with divorced families in which neither parent moved These findings also imply other negative outcomes for these students such as more distress related to the divorce and did not feel a sense of emotional support from their parents Although the data suggests negative outcomes for these students whose parents relocate after divorce there is insufficient research that can alone prove the overall well being of the child 63 A newer study in the Journal of Family Psychology found that parents who move more than an hour away from their children after a divorce are much less well off than those parents who stayed in the same location 64 Effects on children Edit See also Effects of divorce Psychological Edit Divorce is associated with diminished psychological well being in children and adult offspring of divorced parents including greater unhappiness less satisfaction with life weaker sense of personal control anxiety depression and greater use of mental health services A preponderance of evidence indicates that there is a causal effect between divorce and these outcomes 65 A study in Sweden led by the Centre for Health Equity Studies Chess at Stockholm University Karolinska Institutet is published in the Journal of Epidemiology amp Community Health found that children living with just one parent after divorce suffer from more problems such as headaches stomach aches feelings of tension and sadness than those whose parents share custody 66 Children of divorced parents are also more likely to experience conflict in their own marriages and are more likely to experience divorce themselves They are also more likely to be involved in short term cohabiting relationships which often dissolve before marriage 65 There are many studies that show proof of an intergenerational transmission of divorce but this does not mean that having divorced parents will absolutely lead a child to divorce There are two key factors that make this transmission of divorce more likely First inherited biological tendencies or genetic conditions may predispose a child to divorce as well as the model of marriage presented by the child s parents 67 According to Nicholas Wall former President of the Family Division of the English High Court People think that post separation parenting is easy in fact it is exceedingly difficult and as a rule of thumb my experience is that the more intelligent the parent the more intractable the dispute There is nothing worse for most children than for their parents to denigrate each other Parents simply do not realize the damage they do to their children by the battles they wage over them Separating parents rarely behave reasonably although they always believe that they are doing so and that the other party is behaving unreasonably 68 Children involved in high conflict divorce or custody cases can experience varying forms of psychological distress due to conflict between their parents 69 Legal professionals recognize that alienating behaviors are common in child custody cases but are cautious about accepting the concept of parental alienation 70 Research shows that children can be affected 2 4 years before the separation or divorce even occurs This can be due to parental conflict and anticipation of a divorce and decreased parental contact Many couples believe that by separating or becoming legally divorced that they are helping their children and in situations of extreme parental conflict or abuse it most likely will be beneficial 71 Exposure to marital conflict and instability most often has negative consequences for children Several mechanisms are likely to be responsible First observing overt conflict between parents is a direct stressor for children 72 Observational studies reveal that children react to inter parental conflict with fear anger or the inhibition of normal behavior Preschool children who tend to be egocentric may blame themselves for marital conflict resulting in feelings of guilt and lowered self esteem Conflict between parents also tends to spill over and negatively affect the quality of parents interactions with their children Researchers found that the associations between marital conflict and children s externalizing and internalizing problems were largely mediated by parents use of harsh punishment and parent child conflict Furthermore modeling verbal or physical aggression parents teach their children that disagreements are resolved through conflict rather than calm discussion As a result children may not learn the social skills such as the ability to negotiate and reach compromises that are necessary to form mutually rewarding relationships with peers 73 Girls and boys deal with divorce differently For instance girls who initially show signs of adapting well later suffer from anxiety in romantic relationships with men Studies also showed that girls who were separated from their fathers at a younger age tended to be angrier toward the situation as they aged Anger and sadness were also observed as common feelings in adolescents who had experienced parental divorce 74 Academic and socioeconomic Edit Frequently children who have experienced a divorce have lower academic achievement than children from non divorced families 75 In a review of family and school factors related to adolescents academic performance it noted that a child from a divorced family is two times more likely to drop out of high school than a child from a non divorced family These children from divorced families may also be less likely to attend college resulting in the discontinuation of their academic career 76 Many times academic problems are associated with those children from single parent families Studies have shown that this issue may be directly related to the economical influence of divorce A divorce may result in the parent and children moving to an area with a higher poverty rate and a poor education system all due to the financial struggles of a single parent 77 Children of divorced parents also achieve lower levels of socioeconomic status income and wealth accumulation than children of continuously married parents These outcomes are associated with lower educational achievement 65 Young men or women between the ages of 7 and 16 who had experienced the divorce of their parents were more likely than youths who had not experienced the divorce of their parents to leave home because of friction to cohabit before marriage and to parent a child before marriage 78 Divorce often leads to worsened academic achievement in children ages 7 12 the most heightened negative effect being reading test scores These negative effects tend to persist and even escalate after the divorce or separation occurs 71 Children of divorced or separated parents exhibit increased behavioral problems and the marital conflict that accompanies parents divorce places the child s social competence at risk 79 Divorce of elderly couples Edit In the United States of America since the mid 1990s the divorce rate has increased to over 50 among baby boomers More and more seniors are staying single an analysis of census data conducted at Bowling Green State University predicted that divorce numbers would continue to rise Baby boomers who remain unmarried are five times more likely to live in poverty than those who are married They are also three times as likely to receive food stamps public assistance or disability payments 80 Sociologists believe that the rise in the number of older Americans who are not married is a result of factors such as longevity and economics Women especially are becoming more and more financially independent which allows them to feel more secure with being alone in addition to changing perceptions of being divorced or single This has resulted in less pressure for baby boomers to marry or stay married 80 Statistics EditFurther information Divorce demography Asia Edit China Edit China currently holds one of the highest divorce rates in the Asia Pacific region Compared to 2000 China s divorce rates have gone up substantially from a 0 96 crude divorce rate to 3 09 rate in 2020 81 While China s divorce rate has been increasing since 2000 the highest recorded crude divorce rate in the past 20 years was in 2019 with 3 36 divorces 81 However since 2019 China s recorded divorce rate has gone down China has no fault divorce which was implemented through the New Marriage Law in 1950 This allows individuals to divorce without showing any evidence of wrongdoing China is one of the only Asian countries which permits no fault divorce citation needed As of January 2021 China introduced a new policy called the cooling off rule China seeing the rise in divorce rates increasing on a yearly basis the Marriage and Family Edition of Civil Code of the People s Republic of China secured an article 1077 establishing a mandatory cooling off period which has two requirements First on the day in which authorities have received the divorce applications both parties can withdraw the registration within 30 days and additionally to that after 30 days are up couples are required to physically apply for divorce certificate and if they do not show up the initial divorce application will be automatically perceived as withdrawn 82 This novel policy has been extremely controversial where couples are required to wait for at least 30 days before they can commence a divorce The 30 day cooling off period is created with the aim of generating more social stability which avoids couples from making rushed or in the heat of the moment emotionally charged decisions Family stability has always been culturally rooted in China influenced by Confucian beliefs where the harmony of family brings the success of everything 83 A divorce can only be granted when couples have gone through a one month long delay in order to make a decision Since the implementation of the cooling off rule China s Ministry of Civil Affairs discovered as sharp 72 percent drop in divorce rates since the last quarter 84 Given the 30 days of cooling off time many couples have changed their minds supporting the argument that most divorce decisions are made irrationally and emotionally Although there has been a positive effect to reduce divorce in the country Chinese citizens are not responding well to the cooling off policy which concerns women in marriages experiencing domestic abuse In fact from China Digital Times a woman by the name of Kan Xiaofang died of domestic abuse because when she filed for divorce in 2021 she had to wait 30 days for the divorce to be finalized she was hacked to death by her husband 85 The 30 day rule has angered Chinese feminists who believes that the policy undermines the concept of freedom and does not take into consideration of domestic violence which runs common within Chinese households The cooling off policy is still relatively new today only being less than 2 years old Therefore this policy is still one that needs to be examined more deeply to analyze the effect and consequences of delaying the divorce process India Edit India has one of the lowest divorce rates in the world with around 1 of marriages ending in divorces That being said a lot of individuals split without choosing to go through the process of divorce In fact a large number of marriages are not registered and thus a dissolution in such partnership would not be shown in the divorce statistics 86 Additionally divorce is still stigmatized and seen as taboo amongst many families in India The Hindu Marriage Act is an Act of the Parliament of India enacted in 1955 Three other important acts were also enacted as part of the Hindu Code Bills during this time the Hindu Succession Act 1956 the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act 1956 the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act 1956 Divorce under various acts in India The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act 1936 The Dissolution of Muslim Marriage Act 1939 The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act 1936 The Special Marriage Act 1954 The Foreign Marriage Act 1969 The Dissolution of Marriage and Judicial separation under the Indian Divorce Act 1869 Due to the existence of diverse religious faiths in India the Indian Judiciary has implemented laws separately for couples belonging to different religious beliefs Mutual consent divorce procedure is relatively easier and fast while contested divorce procedure takes longer and depends on the religions of the couples Indonesia Edit In 2020 there were around 291 000 divorces recorded in Indonesia 87 These numbers are lower than the previous year reportedly due to the pandemic and a longer process of the dissolution process Divorces are settled in religious courts if they are Muslim or through talaq where a married man can pronounce divorce to his wife There are six grounds of divorce with an additional two for Moslem marriages which include 88 One of the spouse has committed adultery is an alcoholic is addicted to drugs is a gambler or other vices which are difficult to cure One of the spouse has deserted the other spouse for two consecutive years without consent and without legitimate reasons One of the spouse has been sentenced to imprisonment for five years or more One of the spouses has resorted to cruelty or severe ill treatment endangering the life of the other spouse One of the spouse has developed a disability or disease preventing from him or her from fulfilling the duties of husband or wife The spouses have irreconcilable differences as evidenced by frequent disagreements The husband has violated taklik talak a promise that the husband expressly made and written onto the marriage certificate One party convert from Islam into another faith Japan Edit In Japan divorces were on an upward trend from the 1960s until 2002 when they hit a peak of 290 000 divorces 89 While divorce rates have increased since the 1900s they have also slightly declined since 2002 In fact in 2020 there were approximately 193 300 divorces 89 This is a significant decrease from the prior year 2019 which recorded 208 489 divorces 90 There are several types of divorces in Japan Divorce by Agreement Divorce by Conciliation and Divorce by Judgement Divorce by Agreement rikon occurs when both parties mutually agree to separate and do not need to go to court This is the most common type of divorce in Japan Divorce by Conciliation chotei rikon is sought out when individuals are unable to agree on terms or separate Thus these cases go to court in hope to come to a mutual agreement for both parties Lastly Divorce by Judgement saiban rikon occurs when individuals are unable to reach an agreement in court during conciliation Divorce by judgement is uncommon in Japan Singapore Edit Singapore has a crude divorce rate of 1 7 divorce per 1 000 residents 91 Singapore has seen a decrease in divorce rates compared to previous years In fact 2020 marks the lowest number of divorces recorded In 2020 there were 6 700 divorces compared to 2015 2019 which recorded an average number of 7 536 marital dissolutions 91 Additionally most divorces were initiated by women Singapore requires you to be married for three years before filing for divorce That being said if one has suffered exceptional hardship they are eligible to file for divorce before the three years Additionally to get a divorce there must be proof of an irretrievable breakdown of one of the four factors which include adultery unreasonable behaviour desertion and separation 92 South Korea Edit The crude divorce rate in South Korea in 2020 was 2 1 93 Compared to prior years the number of divorces recorded depicts that there are less filed divorces each year Both the number of marriages and divorces decreased from 2019 by 10 7 and 3 9 respectively 94 The highest proportion of divorces in 2020 was amongst those who have been married for 20 years or more followed by those who have been married for four years or less 95 Such findings may suggest that divorce has become more socially accepted in South Korea and the stigma behind separating has lessened Taiwan Edit Taiwan s divorce rate in 2020 stood at 2 19 divorces per 1 000 residents 96 This is the lowest recorded divorce rate in the past 10 years Many divorces in Taiwan are not done in court if there is a mutual agreement If one of the parties does not consent to the divorce then the other spouse may file for divorce under a valid reason of bigamy infidelity ill treatment or desertion Before 2020 adultery in Taiwan was considered a crime and punishable by law 97 Europe Edit Divorce has increased across Europe in the past decade the rate varies between European countries One study estimated that legal reforms accounted for about 20 increase of the divorce rates in Europe between 1960 and 2002 In 2019 Luxembourg had the highest divorce rate per 100 marriages followed by Portugal Finland and Spain 98 Countries in Europe with some of the lowest number of divorces per 100 marriages are Ireland and Malta 98 Serbia Edit On average for every three new marriages in Serbia one divorce occurs 99 In 2019 35 570 marriages were concluded in Serbia 10 899 marriages were divorced and the number of divorces per 1 000 inhabitants was 1 6 100 United Kingdom Edit Main articles Divorce in England and Wales and Divorce in Scotland In 2015 the highest divorces rates in the UK were recorded all beside the sea with Blackpool in the top position The UK divorce rate is estimated at 42 and in 2019 around 107 599 divorces were reported 101 The highest number of divorce applications are reportedly made on Divorce Day which is always the first Monday of the new year North America Edit United States Edit Main article Divorce in the United StatesThe crude divorce rate in 2022 in the United States is 2 3 divorces This is significantly lower than prior years such as those in 2001 where 4 1 divorces were recorded These recent findings suggest a downward trend of the number of people dissolving their marriage However divorce rates range from state to state It s important to look back on why prior years had such a high divorce rate amongst Americans The National Center for Health Statistics reports that wives with children present filed for divorce in approximately two thirds of cases from 1975 to 1988 in the U S For example 71 4 of the cases were filed by women in 1975 and 65 were filed by women in 1988 It is estimated that upwards of 95 of divorces in the U S are uncontested because the two parties are able to come to an agreement without a hearing either with or without lawyers mediators collaborative counsel about the property children and support issues In 2000 the divorce rate reached its peak at 40 but has since slowly declined In 2001 marriages between people of different faiths were three times more likely to get divorced than those of the same faith In fact in a 1993 study members of two mainline Protestant religions had a 20 chance of being divorced in 5 years a 33 for a Catholic and Evangelical and a 40 chance for a Jew and a Christian Couples with different ethnicities and races also had distinctive divorce statistics In 2008 a study by Jenifer L Bratter and Rosalind B King on the Education Resources Information Center found that unions between White males and non White females as well as between Hispanics and non Hispanic individuals have similar or lower risks of divorce than White marriages Unions between a White male and Black female last longer than White White pairings or White Asian pairings Conversely a White female with a Black male and White female with an Asian male are more prone to divorce than White White pairings Additionally as found in 2010 success in marriage has been associated with a higher education and older age For example 81 of college graduates who were over 26 years old who wed in the 1980s were still married 20 years later Additionally 65 of college graduates under 26 who married in the 1980s were still married 20 years later Furthermore 49 of high school graduates under 26 years old who married in the 1980s were still married 20 years later Conversely 2 9 of adults aged 35 39 and without a college degree got divorced in the year 2009 compared with 1 6 with a college education Another study looking at population differences found that a 1 increase in the unemployment rate correlated with a 1 decrease in the divorce rate This was found to be presumably true for individuals who were financially challenged when trying to afford the legal proceedings Nevertheless another study from 1900 to 2008 found that there was a significant increase in the risk of divorce following a layoff and being unemployed 102 Oceania Edit Australia Edit The crude divorce rate in Australia in 2020 was 1 9 divorces per 1 000 residents 103 This rate has remained somewhat consistent throughout the past few years and is the same as the previous year However as divorces are granted after 12 months of separation splits during COVID may not be reflected in the current divorce rate The divorce rate has decreased substantially over the past 20 years with 2 6 divorces recorded per 1 000 residents in 2000 103 In order to apply for divorce one must be separated for at least 12 months New Zealand Edit New Zealand s divorce rate in 2020 was 7 6 divorces per 1 000 residents 104 This rate marks a decrease from previous years such as those in 1983 with a crude divorce rate of 13 3 In fact this rate has decreased significantly from the previous year 2019 with a divorce rate of 8 4 104 Before filing for divorced one must be separated for at least two years 105 After this time one is eligible to submit an application If it is a joint application divorce will take effect after one month 105 If one applies as a sole application then the other spouse has the opportunity to defend it within a certain time period Additionally if individuals appear in court together and the judge files the divorce order then the divorce will effective immediately Africa Edit South Africa Edit Main article Divorce in South Africa According to Statistics South Africa the number of divorces increased by 0 3 from 25 260 divorces granted in 2015 to 25 326 granted in 2016 About 44 4 of the 2016 divorces came from marriages that did not reach their tenth wedding anniversary About 51 1 of divorces in 2016 were filed by women while men filed 34 2 divorce cases 106 Social attitudes EditAttitudes toward divorce vary substantially across the world Divorce is considered socially unacceptable by most of the population in certain Sub Saharan African countries such as Ghana Uganda Nigeria and Kenya South Asian countries including India and Pakistan and South East Asian countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia The majority of the population considers divorce acceptable in Eastern Europe East Asia Latin America and the United States In developed regions such as Western Europe and Japan more than 80 of the population consider divorce socially acceptable Divorce is also widely accepted in certain Muslim majority countries such as Jordan Egypt and Lebanon at least when men initiate it 107 In same sex married couples United States EditThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message All U S states permit same sex marriage For same sex couples in the United States divorce law is in its infancy Rights of spouses to custody of children Edit Upon dissolution of a same sex marriage legal questions remain as to the rights of spouses to custody of the biological children of their spouses 108 Unresolved legal questions abound in this area 109 Child custody policies include several guidelines that determine with whom the child lives following divorce how time is divided in joint custody situations and visitation rights The most frequently applied custody guideline is the best interests of the child standard which takes into account the parents preferences the child s preferences the interactions between parents and children children s adjustment and all family members mental and physical health 110 Religion and divorce EditMain article Religion and divorce Cartoon parodying the circus like divorce proceedings of Anna Gould an American heiress and socialite and Boni de Castellane a French nobleman 111 in 1906 in Paris France 112 Boni de Castellane then sought an annulment from the Vatican so that he could be free to remarry in the Church The annulment case was not finally settled until 1924 when the highest Vatican tribunal upheld the validity of the marriage and denied the annulment In some countries commonly in Europe and North America the government defines and administers marriages and divorces While ceremonies may be performed by religious officials on behalf of the state a civil marriage and thus civil divorce without the involvement of a religion is also possible Due to differing standards and procedures a couple can be legally unmarried married or divorced by the state s definition but have a different status as defined by a religious order Other countries use religious law to administer marriages and divorces eliminating this distinction In these cases religious officials are generally responsible for interpretation and implementation Islam allows yet generally advises against divorce and it can be initiated by either the husband or the wife 113 Dharmic religions allow divorce under some circumstances 114 Christian views on divorce vary Catholic teaching allows only annulment while most other denominations discourage it except in the event of adultery For example the Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Connection in its 2014 Discipline teaches 115 We believe that the only legitimate marriage is the joining of one man and one woman Gen 2 24 Rom 7 2 1 Cor 7 10 Eph 5 22 23 We deplore the evils of divorce and remarriage We regard adultery as the only scripturally justifiable grounds for divorce and the party guilty of adultery has by his or her act forfeited membership in the church In the case of divorce for other cause neither party shall be permitted to marry again during the lifetime of the other and violation of this law shall be punished by expulsion from the church Matt 5 32 Mark 10 11 12 In the carrying out of these principles guilt shall be established in accordance with judicial procedures set forth in The Discipline 115 Jewish views of divorce differ with Reform Judaism considering civil divorces adequate Conservative and Orthodox Judaism on the other hand require that the husband grant his wife a divorce in the form of a get The Millet System where each religious group regulates its own marriages and divorces is still present in varying degrees in some post Ottoman countries including Iraq Syria Jordan Lebanon Israel the Palestinian Authority and Egypt Several countries use sharia Islamic law to administrate marriages and divorces for Muslims Thus Marriage in Israel is administered separately by each religious community Jews Christians Muslims and Druze and there is no provision for interfaith marriages other than marrying in another country For Jews marriage and divorce are administered by Orthodox rabbis Partners can file for divorce either in rabbinical court or Israeli civil court 116 Gender and divorce EditAccording to a study published in the American Law and Economics Review women have filed slightly more than two thirds of divorce cases in the United States 117 This trend is mirrored in the UK where a recent study into web search behavior found that 70 of divorce inquiries were from women These findings also correlate with the Office for National Statistics publication Divorces in England and Wales 2012 118 which reported that divorce petitions from women outnumber those from men by 2 to 1 Regarding divorce settlements according to the 2004 Grant Thornton survey in the UK women obtained a better or considerably better settlement than men in 60 of cases In 30 of cases the assets were split 50 50 and in only 10 of cases did men achieve better settlements down from 24 the previous year The report concluded that the percentage of shared residence orders would need to increase in order for more equitable financial divisions to become the norm 50 Some jurisdictions give unequal rights to men and women when filing for divorce citation needed For couples to Conservative or Orthodox Jewish law which by Israeli civil law includes all Jews in Israel the husband must grant his wife a divorce through a document called a get Granting the get obligates him to pay the woman a significant sum of money 10 000 20 000 as stated on the religious prenuptial contract which can be in addition to whatever prior settlement he had reached as far as continuous child support and funds he had to pay by court order in the civil divorce If the man refuses and agreeing on condition he will not have to pay the money is still called refusing the woman can appeal to a court or the community to pressure the husband A woman whose husband refuses to grant the get or a woman whose husband is missing without sufficient knowledge that he died is called an agunah is still married and therefore cannot remarry Under Orthodox law children of an extramarital affair involving a married Jewish woman are considered mamzerim and cannot marry non mamzerim 116 History EditGreco Roman culture Edit See also Marriage in ancient Rome Roman married couple The ancient Athenians liberally allowed divorce but the person requesting divorce had to submit the request to a magistrate and the magistrate could determine whether the reasons given were sufficient Divorce was rare in early Roman culture but as their empire grew in power and authority Roman civil law embraced the maxim matrimonia debent esse libera marriages ought to be free and either husband or wife could renounce the marriage at will The Christian emperors Constantine and Theodosius restricted the grounds for divorce to grave cause but this was relaxed by Justinian in the 6th century Mali Empire Edit In post classical Mali laws relating to divorced women were documented in the Timbuktu manuscripts 119 Medieval Europe Edit After the fall of the Roman Empire familial life was regulated more by ecclesiastical authority than civil authority The Catholic and Orthodox Church had among others a differing view of divorce The Orthodox Church recognized that there are rare occasions when it is better that couples do separate For the Orthodox to say that marriage is indissoluble means that it should not be broken the violation of such a union perceived as holy being an offense resulting from either adultery or the prolonged absence of one of the partners Thus permitting remarriage is an act of compassion of the Church towards sinful man 120 Under the influence of the Catholic Church the divorce rate had been greatly reduced by the 9th or 10th century 121 which considered marriage a sacrament instituted by Jesus Christ and indissoluble by mere human action 122 Although divorce as known today was generally prohibited in Catholic lands after the 10th century separation of husband and wife and the annulment of marriage were well known What is today referred to as separate maintenance or legal separation was termed divorce a mensa et thoro divorce from bed and board The husband and wife physically separated and were forbidden to live or cohabit together but their marital relationship did not fully terminate 123 Civil courts had no power over marriage or divorce The grounds for annulment were determined by a Catholic church authority and applied in ecclesiastical courts Annulment was for canonical causes of impediment existing at the time of the marriage For in cases of total divorce the marriage is declared null as having been absolutely unlawful ab initio 124 125 126 The Catholic Church held that the sacrament of marriage produced one person from two inseparable from each other By marriage the husband and wife are one person in law that is the very being of legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage or at least incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband under whose wing protection and cover she performs everything 127 Since husband and wife became one person upon marriage recognition of that oneness could be rescinded only on the grounds that the unity never existed to begin with i e that the proclamation of marriage was erroneous and void from the start Secularisation in Europe Edit Henry VIII of England broke with the Catholic Church in order to obtain an annulment After the Reformation marriage came to be considered a contract in the newly Protestant regions of Europe and on that basis civil authorities gradually asserted their power to decree a divortium a vinculo matrimonii or divorce from all the bonds of marriage Since no precedents existed defining the circumstances under which marriage could be dissolved civil courts heavily relied on the previous determinations of the ecclesiastic courts and freely adopted the requirements set down by those courts As the civil courts assumed the power to dissolve marriages courts still strictly construed the circumstances under which they would grant a divorce 128 and considered divorce to be contrary to public policy Because divorce was considered to be against the public interest civil courts refused to grant a divorce if evidence revealed any hint of complicity between the husband and wife to divorce or if they attempted to manufacture grounds for a divorce Divorce was granted only because one party to the marriage had violated a sacred vow to the innocent spouse If both husband and wife were guilty neither would be allowed to escape the bonds of marriage 129 Eventually the idea that a marriage could be dissolved in cases in which one of the parties violated the sacred vow gradually allowed expansion of the grounds upon which divorce could be granted from those grounds which existed at the time of the marriage to grounds which occurred after the marriage but which exemplified violation of that vow such as abandonment adultery or extreme cruelty 130 An exception to this trend was the Anglican Church which maintained the doctrine of marital indissolubility During the English Civil War the Puritans briefly passed a law that divested marriage of all sacrament leaving it as a secular contract that could be broken John Milton wrote four divorce tracts in 1643 1645 that argued for the legitimacy of divorce on grounds of spousal incompatibility His ideas were ahead of their time arguing for divorce at all let alone a version of no fault divorce was extremely controversial and religious figures sought to ban his tracts 131 In 1670 a precedent was first set with an Act of Parliament allowing Lord John Manners to divorce his wife Lady Anne Pierrepont and until the passage of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 divorce could only be obtained through a specific Act of Parliament 132 Josephine first wife of Napoleon obtained the civil dissolution of her marriage under the Napoleonic Code of 1804 The move towards secularisation and liberalisation was reinforced by the individualistic and secular ideals of the Enlightenment The Enlightened absolutist King Frederick II the Great of Prussia decreed a new divorce law in 1752 in which marriage was declared to be a purely private concern allowing divorce to be granted on the basis of mutual consent This new attitude heavily influenced the law in neighbouring Austria under Emperor Joseph II where it was applied to all non Catholic Imperial subjects 133 Divorce was legalised in France after the French revolution on a similar basis although the legal order of the ancien regime was reinstated at the Bourbon restoration of 1816 The trend in Europe throughout the 19th century was one of increased liberalisation by the mid 19th century divorce was generally granted by civil courts in the case of adultery Marilyn Monroe signing divorce papers with celebrity attorney Jerry Giesler In Britain before 1857 wives were regarded as under the economic and legal protection of their husbands and divorce was almost impossible It required a very expensive private Act of Parliament costing perhaps 200 of the sort only the richest could possibly afford It was very difficult to secure divorce on the grounds of adultery desertion or cruelty The first key legislative victory came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 which passed over the strenuous opposition of the highly traditional Church of England The new law made divorce a civil affair of the courts rather than a Church matter with a new civil court in London handling all cases The process was still quite expensive at about 40 but now became feasible for the middle class A woman who obtained a judicial separation took the status of a feme sole with full control of her own civil rights Additional amendments came in 1878 which allowed for separations handled by local justices of the peace The Church of England blocked further reforms until the final breakthrough came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 134 135 In Spain the 1931 Constitution of the Second Spanish Republic for the first time recognised a right to divorce The first law to regulate divorce was the Divorce Act of 1932 which passed the Republican Parliament despite the opposition of the Catholic Church and a coalition of the Agrarian Minority and Minority Basque Navarre Catholic parties The dictatorship of General Franco abolished the law After the restoration of democracy a new divorce law was passed in 1981 again over the opposition of the Catholic Church and part of the Christian Democrat party then a part of the ruling Union of Democratic Center During the first socialist government of Felipe Gonzalez Marquez the 1981 law was amended to expedite the process of separation and divorce of marriages which was again opposed by the Church which called it express divorce In Italy the first divorce law was introduced on 1 December 1970 despite the opposition of the Christian Democrats 136 and entered into force on 18 December 1970 In the following years the Christian Democrats supported also by parties opposed to the law promoted a recall referendum In 1974 in a referendum the majority of the population voted against a repeal of the divorce law A feature of the 1970 divorce law was the long period of marital separation of five years required This period was reduced to three in 1987 and to a year in 2015 in the case of judicial separation and six months in the case of separation by mutual agreement Ireland and Malta approved divorce at referendums in 1995 and 2011 respectively Divorce rates increased markedly during the 20th century in developed countries as social attitudes towards family and sex changed dramatically 137 Divorce has become commonplace in some countries including the United States 138 Canada Australia Germany New Zealand Scandinavia and the United Kingdom 139 Japan Edit In the Edo Period 1603 1868 husbands could divorce their wives by writing letters of divorce Frequently their relatives or marriage arrangers kept these letters and tried to restore the marriages Wives could not divorce their husbands Some wives were able to gain sanctuary in certain Shinto divorce temples After a wife had spent three years in a temple her husband was required to divorce her 140 In 19th century Japan at least one in eight marriages ended in divorce There are four types of divorce in Japan divorce by agreement in which the divorce is mutual divorce by mediation which happens in family court divorce by decision of family court that takes place when a couple cannot complete a divorce through mediation and divorce by judgment of a district court 141 India Edit On a national level the Special Marriage Act passed in 1954 is an inter religious marriage law permitting Indian nationals to marry and divorce irrespective of their religion or faith The Hindu Marriage Act in 1955 which legally permitted divorce to Hindus and other communities who chose to marry under these acts The Indian Divorce Act 1869 142 is the law relating to the divorce of person professing the Christian religion Divorce can be sought by a husband or wife on grounds including adultery cruelty desertion for two years religious conversion mental abnormality venereal disease and leprosy 143 Divorce is also available based on mutual consent of both the spouses which can be filed after at least one year of separated living Mutual consent divorce can not be appealed and the law mandates a minimum period of six months from the time divorce is applied for for divorce to be granted 144 Contested divorce is when one of the spouse is not willing to divorce the other spouse under such condition the divorce is granted only on certain grounds according to the Hindu marriage act of 1955 While a Muslim husband can unilaterally bring an end to the marriage by pronouncing talaq 145 Muslim women must go to court claiming any of the grounds provided under the Dissolution of Muslim Marriage Act 146 In the first major family law reform in the last decade the Supreme Court of India banned the Islamic practice of Triple Talaq divorce by uttering of the Talaq word thrice by the husband The landmark Supreme Court of India judgment was welcomed by women activists across India 147 Official figures of divorce rates are not available but it has been estimated that 1 in 100 or another figure of 11 in 1 000 marriages in India end up in divorce 148 Various communities are governed by specific marital legislation distinct to Hindu Marriage Act and consequently have their own divorce laws The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act 1936 149 The Dissolution of Muslim Marriage act 1939 150 The Foreign Marriage Act 1969 151 The Muslim Women Protection of Rights on Divorce Act 1986 152 An amendment to the marriage laws to allow divorce based on irretrievable breakdown of marriage as alleged by one of the spouses is under consideration in India 153 In June 2010 the Union Cabinet of India approved the Marriage Laws Amendment Bill 2010 which if cleared by Parliament would establish irretrievable breakdown as a new ground for divorce 154 Under the proposed amendment the court before proceeding to the merits of the case must be satisfied by the evidences produced that parties have been living apart for a continuous period of not less than three years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition 155 Islamic law Edit Main article Divorce in Islam Divorce in Islam can take a variety of forms some initiated by the husband and some initiated by the wife The main traditional legal categories are talaq repudiation khulʿ mutual divorce annulment judicial divorce and oaths The theory and practice of divorce in the Islamic world have varied according to time and place 156 Historically the rules of divorce were governed by sharia as interpreted by traditional Islamic jurisprudence and they differed depending on the legal school 157 Historical practice sometimes diverged from legal theory 157 In modern times as personal status family laws were codified they generally remained within the orbit of Islamic law but control over the norms of divorce shifted from traditional jurists to the state 156 Philippines Edit Divorce as a means of terminating marriage is illegal for all Filipinos except Filipino Muslims There is only civil annulment after a lengthy legal separation The process is costly and long and there are many legally married couples in extramarital relations even without a divorce law Code of Muslim Personal Laws of the Philippines known as Presidential Decree PD No 1083 Title II Marriage and Divorce Chapter 3 Divorce allows for divorce recognized by the state There are two sharia courts in the Philippine judicial system that hear these cases On 27 July 2010 Gabriela Women s Party filed in Congress House Bill No 1799 or the Divorce Bill of the Philippines as one of many attempts to introduce pro divorce legislation Senator Pia Cayetano has filed a separate divorce bill in the Senate During that time the Philippines along with Malta and the Vatican are the three most conservative countries on the issue of divorce The bill did not pass any level of legislation because of this In 2013 the divorce bill was refiled however did not pass any level of legislation as well In a latest attempt the divorce bill was refiled again in 2017 On 22 February 2018 the House of Representatives committee on population and family relations approved a bill seeking to legalize divorce the first time in Philippine history for such a measure to pass the committee level of legislation The majority of the members of the House of Representatives lower house of Congress both majority and minority blocs are in favor of divorce however divorce continues to be a divisive issue in the Senate upper house of Congress as stark opposition is present among male senators 158 159 Patterns EditDivorce rates increase during times of hardship war and major events Divorce rates increased after World War II because people were quick to marry each other before they went to war When soldiers returned they found out that they did not have much in common with their spouses so they divorced 160 See also EditBreakup Community property Divorce law around the world Divorce of same sex couples legal aspects divorce rates Divorce party Dysfunctional family Fear of commitment Grey divorce Husband selling Implications of divorce List of most expensive divorces List of people who remarried the same spouse Januario Lourenco inventor of electronic divorce New York divorce coercion gang Primary physical custody Relationship counseling Relationship education Wife selling Wife selling English custom References Edit a b Divorce Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 22 September 2018 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9780199764464 Archived from the original on 4 February 2017 Retrieved 20 March 2017 House panel approves substitute bill on divorce Cnnphilippines com Archived from the original on 21 September 2018 Retrieved 21 September 2018 EXPLAINER What are the grounds provisions in House divorce bill Rappler com Archived from the original on 24 November 2018 Retrieved 21 September 2018 Kunz Jenifer 2011 Think marriages and families Upper Saddle River N J Pearson Education p 240 ISBN 978 0 205 16760 9 Suggested reading EditAlford William P Have You Eaten Have You Divorced Debating the Meaning of Freedom in Marriage in China in Realms of Freedom in Modern China William C Kirby ed Stanford University Press 2004 Berlin G 2004 The Effects of Marriage and Divorce on Families and Children Davies P T amp Cummings E M 1994 Marital Conflict and Child Adjustment An Emotional Security Hypothesis American Psychological Association Psychological Bulletin 116 387 411 Foulkes Jamison L 2001 The Effects of Divorce on Children Hughes R 2009 The Effects of Divorce on Children Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Phillips Roderick 1991 Untying the knot a short history of divorce Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 42370 0 Singer Joseph William 2005 Same Sex Marriage Full Faith and Credit and the Evasion of Obligation Stanford Journal of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties 1 1 51 Strong B DeVault C amp Cohen T F 2011 The Marriage and Family Experience Intimate Relationships in a Changing Society Belmont Calif Wadsworth Cengage Learning Thomas S G 28 October 2011 The Good Divorce The New York Times Zartler U Heinz Martin V Arranz Becker O Edts 2015 Family Dynamics after Separation A Life Course Perspective on Post Divorce Families Special Issue ZfF Volume 10 Opladen Toronto Barbara Budrich ISBN 978 3 8474 0686 0 Fawcett Margaret I 2016 The Changing Family in Northern Ireland Youth amp Society 32 81 106 doi 10 1177 0044118X00032001005 S2CID 146282562 External links Edit Look up divorce in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Divorce Wikiquote has quotations related to Divorce Wikisource has original text related to this article Divorce Societal aspects of divorce at Curlie Legal aspects of divorce at Curlie Marriage and divorce statistics Eurostat Statistics Explained Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Divorce amp oldid 1151922772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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