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Poll shows 60 per cent opposed to tax individualisation

A clear majority of women, 60 per cent, are opposed to tax individualisation, according to an Irish Times/Behaviour and Attitudes poll released on Saturday. The poll showed that 14 per cent of women were extremely concerned about the issue, 24 per cent were very concerned, while 24 per cent were somewhat concerned.

02/10/07
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Christian organisation loses tax status after refusing gay civil union

The US state of New Jersey has stripped the Methodist Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association of its tax-exempt status for part of its property, it was announced last week. The Methodist camp made the news earlier this year after it refused, for religious reasons, to allow a lesbian couple to hold a "civil-union" ceremony at a pavilion on the camp's property.

27/09/07
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Catholic schools acting within the law, says CPSMA

Schools operating Catholics-first enrolment policies are not breaking the law, according to legal advice received by the Catholic Primary School Managers Association (CPSMA). The body says that Catholic schools are in compliance with both Irish and European equality legislation.

27/09/07
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Almost half of women work out of necessity not choice says poll

Almost half (42 per cent) of women work outside the home work because of economic necessity, and not choice, according to a new Irish Times poll. More than half, 53 per cent, did work out of choice. However, it is not known what proportion of each figure consists of women with dependent children/

The poll, carried out by the Behaviour and Attitudes polling group in conjunction with The Irish Times, also found that 49 per cent of women believe that women in paid employment have a higher standing in society. More women also agree that those working in paid employment have higher self-esteem (50 per cent) than homemakers.

However, when women working in the home are asked whether women in the workplace have higher self esteem, only 40 per cent agree. Women working in the home and those in paid employment also disagreed about the issue of raising children.

While just over half of women (53 per cent) overall believe children fare better if they are brought up by a mother who is a full-time homemaker, 71 per cent of homemakers believe children fare better when raised by a stay-at-home mother. This drops to 41 per cent among women in full-time employment. A further 30 per cent believe it does not make any difference. Only a small minority (7 per cent) believe their children fare better when their mother works outside the home.

A total of 43 per cent of women overall feel women working outside the home have a better quality of life. There was little discrepancy in answers given by working women and homemakers on this issue.

When women were asked to rank 19 issues in terms of importance, the majority put financial independence at the top of the list (65 per cent said it was very important). This is followed by personal care, such as skin or hair (57 per cent) and female friends (54 per cent). The least important item is politics with just 9 per cent of women ranking it as very important.

Feminism was also given a relatively low priority, with only 19 per cent ranking it as very important. Younger women were just as likely to have the same opinion on the issue as middle-aged women. However, 44 per cent of women rated equality of the sexes as very important.

A total of 35 per cent of women are full-time homemakers. Most of them are older women (66 per cent are over 65 years), while this falls dramatically among younger women (15 per cent among 18-34 year olds are homemakers).

27/09/07

Man may be named as third parent in Australia case

A lesbian mother in Australia is battling to stop the gay father of her child from having his homosexual lover declared one of the child’s parents.

25/09/07
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Ban on same sex marriage does not discriminate, says court in US

The highest court in the US state of Maryland has upheld a 34-year-old state law banning same-sex marriage, rejecting an attempt by 19 gay men and lesbians to win the right to marry. The decision reversed an earlier ruling by a lower court.

25/09/07
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Most Americans don't reach 25th wedding anniversary: report

More than half of Americans who might have celebrated their 25th wedding anniversaries since 2000 were divorced, separated or widowed before reaching that milestone, according to the latest US census data, released last week.

25/09/07
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“Children's rights” referendum to be held next year, says Taoiseach

The proposed referendum on children's rights may be held next year, even thought there is still no agreement on the controversial topic of the age of sexual consent, the Taoiseach has said. Mr Ahern said the referendum could be held on the same day as a vote to ratify the new European Union treaty.

18/09/07
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Ireland joins UK in case against elderly sisters

The Irish Government has filed arguments with the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in support of the UK government against a pair of elderly spinsters who are challenging the UK's tax inheritance rules.

12/09/07
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Unmarried father wins right to seek return of his twin boys to Ireland

The unmarried father who is seeking the return of his twin boys to Ireland has won an Irish court order declaring that their removal from Ireland was unlawful. The boys, both two, were taken out of Ireland in January by their mother, without the father's consent or knowledge. The man, known as Mr G, is hoping to have them returned to the State by the end of the month.

12/09/07
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Faith schools “valuable, engaged partners”: UK Government

Faith groups are lining up with the UK Government to argue that religious schools make a positive contribution to community cohesion in England. A joint statement, from groups representing the five faith groups in the state sector, Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Sikh, and Hindu and the Government, said that faith schools were "valuable, engaged partners" in education and in the wider society.

11/09/07
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President launches new family research centre in NUI Galway.

A new family research body, with 20 full-time staff and and PhD students, has been launched today by President Mary McAleese. The Child and Family Research Centre says it aims to “improve outcomes for children and their families and advance practice and policy in Ireland”.

11/09/07
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Multi-denominational body backs Archbishop on schools crisis.

Educate Together, a group promoting multi-denominational education, has backed Archbishop Diarmuid Martin in the row over school places in Dublin. Paul Rowe, a spokesman for the group said that the Catholic enrollment policy was not responsible for the acute shortage of school places in parts of north county Dublin.

07/09/07
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Single dads to get more access to children, says Minister Cullen

Fathers who do not live with their children are to get more equal access to them, Social and Family Affairs Minister Martin Cullen has promised. A growing number of fathers are reporting problems with establishing relationships with their children because of lack of visitation rights.

06/09/07
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State to blame for schools' crisis, says Archbishop Martin

Poor planning by State agencies, not Church enrolment policy, is to blame for the shortage of school places in north and west Dublin, according to Dr Diarmuid Martin, the Archbishop of Dublin.

06/09/07
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County to appeal against Iowa court's overturning of same sex marriage ban

Polk County in Iowa is to appeal against a lower court ruling that the state's ban on same sex marriage is unconstitutional. Judge Robert Hanson ruled last Thursday that the ban, passed by legislature in 1998, breached the due process and equal treatment provisions of the state's constitution.

04/09/07
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Vast majority of farmers believe prenuptial agreements should be recognised: poll

Irish farmers fear losing their farms in the wake of divorce. A new poll by Macra na Feirme, an organisation representing young farmers, has revealed that a massive 80 per cent of farmers believe that prenuptial agreements should be recognised in Ireland.

04/09/07
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Thinking about God leads to more altruistic behaviour, study finds

People who think about God are three times as generous as those who do not, according to psychology researchers at the University of British Columbia (UBC). In a study to be published in next month's issue of Psychological Science Journal, researchers investigated how thinking about God and notions of a higher power influenced positive social behaviour. Specifically, the researchers looked at cooperation with others and generosity to strangers.

31/08/07
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Divorces in UK hit 22 year low, figures show

The number of divorces in the UK is at its lowest for 22-years, according to statistics that suggest that married couples don't see it is a quick fix any longer.

31/08/07
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Court in US opens doors to gay adoption

The Supreme Court in the US state of Maine has opened the way for gay adoption. On Thursday it overturned a lower court decision and allowed a lesbian couple to adopt two siblings who were their foster children. And in Colorado, a lesbian couple have become the first to avail of the state's new law allowing gay couples to adopt.

31/08/07
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"The child...shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality and, as far as possible, the right to know and be cared for by his or her parents."

Article 7. UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.