Alongside its dramatic demographic consequences, no-fault divorce prompted a sea change in conventional understandings of marriage. |
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You know, I like the idea of no-fault insurance, but I really wish it were removed just for people who drove drunk. |
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Since the invention of no-fault divorce laws, divorce rates have skyrocketed. |
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The current regime of no-fault divorce, for example, really amounts to unilateral divorce. |
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In Britain, the legislation resulted only in a regime of partial no-fault divorce. |
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By the 1970s, most Americans had access to the no-fault divorce, where a marriage could be ended simply because the partners were unhappy. |
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Of all the legal changes to marriage over the past 40 years, no-fault divorce has had the greatest impact on the institution. |
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Why, in this age of cynicism, sexual free-for-all and the quickie no-fault divorce, do people still get married? |
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My husband and I, after a long time of careful thinking and talking, have decided to end our marriage with a no-fault dissolution. |
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With the exception of 1976, the year the Family Law Act was introduced to allow no-fault divorces, 2001 saw the highest number of divorces ever granted in Australia. |
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I think one of the major changes was when no-fault divorce came in. |
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And obviously the no-fault divorce laws were all the fault of gays. |
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Michigan's no-fault insurance law provides unlimited lifetime coverage for medical expenses tied to auto wrecks. |
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Spouse and child maintenance, and child custody, were also to be decided on a no-fault basis. |
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The team's no-risk, no-fault offense resulted in only 13.4 turnovers per game. |
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But in 2003, New York was the last state in America that still didn't have no-fault divorce on the books. |
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If no-fault is good, why do we have the highest divorce rate of any Western nation? |
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But no-fault divorce takes away a woman's bargaining chips when her husband decides he wants to ditch her. |
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This scheme virtually eliminated the right of an injured individual to seek compensation from the responsible driver for losses that are not covered under the no-fault plan. |
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In no-fault auto insurance, for instance, the victim of an accident cannot normally drag the driver who hit her into a deposition and before a jury. |
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Propose an amendment banning no-fault divorce and we can talk. |
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Then there are the no-fault divorce laws which make it easy for one partner to walk away from a marriage but still be entitled to a half of the joint assets. |
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Marriage is an institution that requires a great deal of commitment and, with the no-fault divorce laws we have these days, far more commitment than ever before. |
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It's not news that Florida's no-fault auto insurance system is fraught with problems. |
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The rise of no-fault, unilateral divorce does not trouble the Sisterhood. |
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Walker had first-party coverage from Allstate, as called for under New York's no-fault law. |
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Negotiations have been hindered by CSX's insistence on maintaining a no-fault liability policy on the track, even after the state purchases it. |
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This call for evidence will close on June 8 and is wider than expected, as previous announcements had indicated it would apply only to no-fault dismissals. |
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And don't forget no-fault divorces where a spouse could owe alimony to someone who caused the breakup, says Frederick Hertz, an attorney in Oakland, Calif. |
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