Here it is kind of messy regarding children custody under Chinese laws. First of all, China Marriage Law doesn’t mention the word “custody” in any of its 51 articles. Instead, it uses the term “maintenance” or “support”, and when the court orders that the child lives with one sp...
In a country where gay marriage is illegal, the majority of gay men chose to marry women and have children because of the pressure from their parents and society. Many Chinese believe continuing the family bloodline is an inescapable male duty and not having children constitutes a failure. NO ...
The government seems to have ignored them. There isn't a law to ban LGBTQ+ and there is also not any support for them. EXCEPT when involved with pornographic content or drug (as I know homosexual people may use some "drugs" to relieve the pain). ...
Talk about killing two birds with one stone. An advertisement went up at a job fair's bulletin board looking for a manager-slash-daughter-in-law.Credit: Weibo A concerned father decided to take matters into his own hands when he saw that his son had been single for a decade. He posted...
“glass-half-empty” loop. I can’t seem to kick the feeling that the arrangement of having his mother around is somehow unfair. Yet, in the next moment, I’ve felt I should be much more grateful for what has been in the glass at all. I may not have married my mother-in-law, ...
In China, adult children are not only influenced by Confucian culture, but are also governed by law to support their parents. Confucian culture considers adult children supporting their grandparents as an expression of filial piety, and China’s civil code includes legal obligations for children to...
They also face pressures from working, supporting parents, raising children as well as managing and maintaining marriages and relationships [10]. All of these may lead to having some influence on the adults’ mental health, which manifests as unstable mental state and mood changes such as ...
(derived from the woman’s report on her partner) based on 32 items with seven subscales (economic control, threatening control, intimidating control, emotional control, isolating control, using children, and minimizing). A cut-off score of 1.145 has been shown to distinguish high from low ...
5/ timothy smith, director of the survey, attributed the trend to more women in the work force, driven there by economic necessity and a desire for a career, and a relaxation of social mores that frowned on cohabitation and on having children outside marriage. 6/ ``marriage h...
Using children to make viral content has a number of legal risks. According to China’s Law on the Protection of Minors, organizations and individuals are prohibited from making minors engage in activities that could cause physical and mental harm to minors. The law, which entered into effect ...