The factors used to determine that a parent is unfit are generally governed by state laws with child endangerment being the determining factor. The following include some of the reasons a parent may be declared unfit:
The factors used to determine that a parent is unfit are generally governed by state laws with child endangerment being the determining factor. The following include some of the reasons a parent may be declared unfit:
The factors used to determine that a parent is unfit are generally governed by state laws with child endangerment being the determining factor. The following include some of the reasons a parent may be declared unfit:
The factors used to determine that a parent is unfit are generally governed by state laws with child endangerment being the determining factor. The following include some of the reasons a parent may be declared unfit:
Of course you can and you should, especially if there is a court order.
If at the custody hearing, the judge believes that you are the cause of the child's overweight problem, the father could very well win full custody. If you can afford it, hire a lawyer to argue for your side.
Both mother and father cause when the father is fiding food the mother sits on the nest and when the mother is finding food for the baby bird or for herself the father sits on them.
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The depends on the cause, as most mothers tend to be Gatekeepers. see link This problem is most prevalent in males in their teens and early 20s. Males don't reach full maturity until age 30, whereas the woman reaches it at age 24. Far to often, young women forces a young man into being a father, when he's not emotionally ready for such a responsibility. As they mature, they come to realize that they have made a mistake. Preventing him from being a parent, regardless of when he came to this realization, only harms the children.
The biological father of a child always has the right to sue for custody of his child. Whether his immigration status will cause problems for him being awarded custody and or being allowed to stay in the country is a totally separate issue however. Solely based on the best interests of the child if the mother is truly abusive or neglectful the father should intervene in order to protect the child, irregardless of his legal status. While he may be deported and unable to obtain custody himself the state will assess the child's living situation and move to protect the child if it is appropriate.
There are many factors that can cause a mental illness. If the mother uses drugs this can cause mental issues. If the father physically abuses the mother while carrying the child this could cause mental defects by injuring the fetus. There are also genetic reasons that can cause mental illness that either or both parents can carry. There are many things that are believed to cause mental illnesses so blaming it on a single cause or person is nearly imposable to do.
FROM ME [THE ONE ASKING QUESTION]- Also i would like to remind you that my mother lives in louisiana, has no custody right(cause she has signed them over), and is wanted to obtain me. Also my grandmother has custody rights, but would i have the choice to move in with her from my father?
Father (dad): daddy Father (priest): pater padre vicar To parent (verb): beget birth cause Mother: momma mommy
If she relinquished her parental rights, than no. If she relinquished custody, than yes.
You are going to probably have to hire a lawyer that deals with child custody cases. He will help you find a way to make it look as though you are the more stable parent or gaurdian. This is gonna get messy though. My sister fought this forever with her ex.
Lots of things can happen. The only way to find out if it will happen in your particular case is to get an attorney to go to court and see.