Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Australia: The Search for Property in the Labyrinth of the Discretionary Trust
- Brazil: Intuitu Personae Adoption in the Brazilian Legal System
- Canada: Family Law at the Supreme Court of Canada
- China: Reform of the Marriage and Family Part of the Civil Code in China
- England and Wales: Beware of International Relationships
- European Court of Human Rights: Challenging Paternity under Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights
- France: A Chronicle of French Family Law: 2019
- Germany: Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation and Parentage: Family Law Lagging Behind
- Hong Kong: Hong Kong Family Law Today: Drowning not Waving?
- Korea: Full Guardianship in Korean Law: An Evaluation Over Seven Years from the Perspective of Family Court Practices and the Constitution
- Norway: The New Norwegian Adoption Act
- Poland: Discussion and Reform of Family Law in Poland
- Scotland: Making Scotland ‘The Best Place in the World to Grow Up’?
- Serbia: Child Maintenance and Welfare in Serbian Law
- Slovenia: New Regulation on Guardianship for Adults in Slovenia
- South Africa: Aspects of Dutch Colonial Family Law Related to the Indonesian Rajah of Tambora’s Exile at the Cape
- Sweden and California: On Children’s Rights to be Heard in Custody and Support Matters
- UN Committee on the Rights of the Child: Continued Reflections on Family Law Issues in the Jurisprudence of the CRC Committee: The Convention on the Rights of the Child @ 30
- Index
Norway: The New Norwegian Adoption Act
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Australia: The Search for Property in the Labyrinth of the Discretionary Trust
- Brazil: Intuitu Personae Adoption in the Brazilian Legal System
- Canada: Family Law at the Supreme Court of Canada
- China: Reform of the Marriage and Family Part of the Civil Code in China
- England and Wales: Beware of International Relationships
- European Court of Human Rights: Challenging Paternity under Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights
- France: A Chronicle of French Family Law: 2019
- Germany: Gender Identity, Sexual Orientation and Parentage: Family Law Lagging Behind
- Hong Kong: Hong Kong Family Law Today: Drowning not Waving?
- Korea: Full Guardianship in Korean Law: An Evaluation Over Seven Years from the Perspective of Family Court Practices and the Constitution
- Norway: The New Norwegian Adoption Act
- Poland: Discussion and Reform of Family Law in Poland
- Scotland: Making Scotland ‘The Best Place in the World to Grow Up’?
- Serbia: Child Maintenance and Welfare in Serbian Law
- Slovenia: New Regulation on Guardianship for Adults in Slovenia
- South Africa: Aspects of Dutch Colonial Family Law Related to the Indonesian Rajah of Tambora’s Exile at the Cape
- Sweden and California: On Children’s Rights to be Heard in Custody and Support Matters
- UN Committee on the Rights of the Child: Continued Reflections on Family Law Issues in the Jurisprudence of the CRC Committee: The Convention on the Rights of the Child @ 30
- Index
Summary
Résumé
Une nouvelle législation sur l’adoption est entrée en vigueur en Norvège le 1er juillet 2018. L’objectif de la loi est d’établir un lien légal durable entre adoptés et adoptants afin d’assurer une éducation stable aux enfants. Ce chapitre présente la nouvelle loi dans le contexte général du droit norvégien. L’accent est mis sur la place de l’enfant dans les procédures d’adoption. Les travaux préparatoires ont donné lieu à des divergences de vue, particulièrement sur la question de l’équilibre entre le désir de protéger l’enfant et le droit de ce dernier à l’information et à la participation. Le chapitre se penche également sur des questions relatives à l’adoption internationale et au droit international privé.
INTRODUCTION
A new adoption act entered into force in Norway on 1 July 2018. The Act is replacing the former adoption act from 1986, but Norway has had adoption legislation since 1917. Historically, domestic adoptions of infants of unmarried mothers were the most common adoption. In the 1950s, there were more than 1,000 such adoptions annually, while there are now just a couple each year.
During the 1970s, intercountry adoptions increased, with a peak year in 1998. For the last two decades, however, the number of intercountry adoptions has fallen drastically, in line with the international trend.
A third type of adoption is step-parent adoption, where one spouse adopts the other spouse's child. These adoptions increased with the rise in the divorce rate and peaked in the 1970s. Step-parent adoption is now the most common type of adoption in Norway. A new type of step-parent adoption is adoption for establishing parenthood for children born after surrogacy and artificial reproduction.
In all these types of adoptions, the child's original parents consent to the adoption. There is also a possibility for non-consensual adoption of foster children as a public child care intervention. Such adoptions are regulated by the Child Welfare Act and not by the Adoption Act, and will not be considered here, with the exception of a special clause on contact visits after adoption, which is found in the Adoption Act.
This chapter will examine the new Act, focusing mainly on the position of the child in adoption proceedings and on the international aspects of adoption.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- International Survey of Family Law 20202020 Edition, pp. 185 - 202Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2020
- 1
- Cited by