Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Introduction to the Act
- 2 What is a civil partnership? Formation by registration in England and Wales: eligibility
- 3 Pre-registration procedure: standard procedure; house-bound and detained partners; certain non-residents and other special cases
- 4 Registration in England and Wales – the standard procedure; the special procedure
- 5 Registration outside the UK by Order in Council
- 6 Overseas relationships treated as civil partnerships
- 7 Financial and property implications of civil partnership
- 8 Children
- 9 Relationship between the Civil Partnership Act and the Gender Recognition Act
- 10 The ending of the partnership: orders for dissolution
- 11 Nullity and other proceedings
- 12 Offences
- 13 Domestic violence and occupation of the home
- 14 Financial consequences on breakdown
- 15 Financial relief in England and Wales after an overseas dissolution
- 16 Miscellaneous
- Appendix Civil Partnership Act 2004 – extracts
- Index
1 - Introduction to the Act
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Introduction to the Act
- 2 What is a civil partnership? Formation by registration in England and Wales: eligibility
- 3 Pre-registration procedure: standard procedure; house-bound and detained partners; certain non-residents and other special cases
- 4 Registration in England and Wales – the standard procedure; the special procedure
- 5 Registration outside the UK by Order in Council
- 6 Overseas relationships treated as civil partnerships
- 7 Financial and property implications of civil partnership
- 8 Children
- 9 Relationship between the Civil Partnership Act and the Gender Recognition Act
- 10 The ending of the partnership: orders for dissolution
- 11 Nullity and other proceedings
- 12 Offences
- 13 Domestic violence and occupation of the home
- 14 Financial consequences on breakdown
- 15 Financial relief in England and Wales after an overseas dissolution
- 16 Miscellaneous
- Appendix Civil Partnership Act 2004 – extracts
- Index
Summary
Background
The Civil Partnership Act 2004 received the Royal Assent on 18 November 2004. Section 263 of the Act provides for the coming into force of its provisions. All the substantive provisions of the Act are to come into force by commencement orders. At the date of publication of this book at least one commencement order has been made, namely the Civil Partnership Act 2004 (Commencement Order No.1) Order 2005 (S.I. 112) and the indication from the Department of Constitutional Affairs is that because of the large volume of rules to be made in the wake of the Act, it will not to be brought fully into force until 5 December 2005.
The Act was heralded by a document originating in the Women and Equality Unit of the Department of Trade and Industry in June 2003 entitled ‘Civil Partnership – A framework for the legal recognition of same-sex couples’ with a foreword by Jacqui Smith M.P., the then Minister of State for Industry and the Regions and Deputy Minister for Women and Equality. Her words are an attempt to summarise or encapsulate what the government perceived as the unfairness and injustice that the Act seeks to remedy. In that foreword the Minister stated:
Today there are thousands of same-sex couples living in stable and committed partnership. These relationships span many years with couples looking after each other, caring for their loved ones and actively participating in society; in fact living in exactly the same way as any other family. They are our families, our friends, our colleagues and our neighbours. Yet the law rarely recognises their relationship.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Civil Partnership Act 2004A Practical Guide, pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005