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One in ten marriages involve a divorced person: CSO

Ten per cent of all marriages in Ireland now involve at least one person who has been divorced, according to figures released today by the Central Statistics Office (CSO). In addition, a majority of middle-aged people who marry, are marrying for a second time.

30/06/09
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Children from broken homes used by gangs: report

Young children, often from broken homes, are being recruited by Limerick's criminal gangs, according to a major new study.

30/06/09
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Civil Partnership Bill “deeply flawed and undermines marriage”

The Government's Civil Partnerships Bill, published today, reveals “a deeply flawed and poorly thought-out approach to family policy which undermines the special status of marriage,” according to The Iona Institute.

26/06/09
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Civil Partnership Bill “deeply flawed and undermines marriage”

The Government's Civil Partnerships Bill, published today, reveals “a deeply flawed and poorly thought-out approach to family policy which undermines the special status of marriage,” according to The Iona Institute.

26/06/09
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Teachers code may impose “commitment to secularism”: lawyer

A planned code of conduct for UK teachers risks imposing a “test of professional commitment to secularism”, a leading employment lawyer says.

26/06/09
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Recession hasn't stopped Christian generosity: poll

Christians are still giving generously to charity despite the economic downturn, a new poll shows.

25/06/09
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Church of England report blasts BBC for treating Christianity as “freak show”

The Church of England is set to attack the BBC in report which says that the corporation is treating Christianity like a ‘freak show’.

23/06/09
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Department officials to meet with Archbishop over school patronage

The Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Diarmuid Martin is set to meet officials from the Department of Education soon to discuss his proposals to divest control of some Catholic schools, according to a report in the Irish Times.

23/06/09
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Government obtains agreement on Lisbon guarantees: report

EU leaders have agreed to provide the legal guarantees, including on abortion, the family and education, being sought by the Irish Government ahead of a planned re-run of the Lisbon Treaty referendum later this year.

19/06/09
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End family breakdown culture, says leading family judge

A culture of broken relationships is scarring children and damaging society, a leading family judge warned on Tuesday.

19/06/09
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Fine Gael “believes in parental choice”: Hayes

Parental choice “must be at the heart of education policy”, according to Fine Gael's education spokesperson Brian Hayes. Speaking to the Irish Catholic newspaper, Mr Hayes said that there should be no “one-size-fits-all approach to educational provision”.

18/06/09
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Half out of wedlock births to cohabiting couples

Half the children born outside wedlock in the third quarter of last year were to cohabiting couples, new figures show.

17/06/09
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Rights of parents to faith schools cannot be “brushed aside”: Archbishop

The right of parents to send their children to faith schools is recognised in the Constitution and cannot be brushed aside, the Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Diarmuid Martin, has said.

17/06/09
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Government publishes Lisbon socio-ethical guarantees

Guarantees protecting the Irish Constitution as regards family, abortion and education from aspects of the Lisbon Treaty, plus the accompanying Charter of Fundamental Rights, have been published by the Government ahead of a second referendum in the autumn.

16/06/09
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Secularists seek to reduce school choice says TES editor

If secularist opponents of faith schools think religion is “a busted flush” they should stop being afraid of its influence, writes the editor of the Times Educational Supplement (TES).

16/06/09
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Overwhelming majority continue to believe in God: survey

Ninety five per cent of Irish people still believe in God, according to a study launched in Maynooth this week.

11/06/09
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EU “must keep promise” on Lisbon guarantees says Senator Mullen

Senator Rónán Mullen has challenged Ireland's EU partners to be true to their word and ensure that Ireland receives guarantees on family law and the right to life ahead of a second referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.

Following on from a report in today's Irish Times suggesting that some EU member-states were expressing doubts about the guarantees, he urged Member States “not to break their promises made only six months ago”.

The story revealed that a meeting of EU ambassadors to discuss the text of the guarantees was cancelled last night because of problems that emerged at bilateral meetings between Irish officials and their EU counterparts.

Referring to a meeting of the European Council last December, he said that the promise that member states made at that stage to give Ireland guarantees on a range of issues, including education, the right to life and the family, had been unconditionally. The next meeting of the Council is next Thursday and Friday when the guarantees are likely to be agreed.

According to the text of the Presidency Conclusions in December, a guarantee was to be given to Ireland that “the provisions of the Irish Constitution in relation to the right to life, education and the family are not in any way affected by the fact that the Treaty of Lisbon attributes legal status to the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights or by the justice and home affairs provisions of the said Treaty”.

Senator Mullen added that member states now appeared to be breaking their promise “by inflicting 'death by a thousand cuts' on the guarantees”.

Czech Europe minister Stefan Fule, who is chairing the negotiations on the wording of the guarantees, said EU states had agreed to give guarantees on the specific areas of family, right to life, religion, neutrality and taxation.

However he added that there was also a consensus that member states did not want to have to ratify the treaty again.

Senator Mullen continued: “The objections they appear to be raising now could all have been made in December but weren’t. The promise was unconditional. The Irish Government has a duty to do everything it can to ensure those promises are fulfilled.”

And he warned that a failure to secure the said guarantees would damage the prospects of passing a second Lisbon referendum.

Senator Mullen said: “These guarantees are a matter of Irish sovereignty and which, in theory, EU member states should have no problem with. Failure to implement them could jeopardise a second Lisbon referendum – a risk the Government would be foolish to ignore. Six months before the first Lisbon vote very few commentators foresaw its defeat.”

Taoiseach Brian Cowen told last December’s EU summit that he wanted the guarantees to be enshrined in the EU treaties at the earliest possible opportunity to provide a cast iron assurance to Irish voters. When the guarantees are written into the EU treaties they become primary law, which gives them extra validity in the eyes of the European Court of Justice.

Mr Cowen’s request was seemingly granted when French president Nicolas Sarkozy told the media an Irish protocol with the guarantees could be ratified by all states with the next EU accession treaty, probably Croatia.

However it is believed that Britain, in particular, is very nervous about reopening a national debate on Lisbon by agreeing to ratify an Irish protocol through the House of Commons. The Conservatives made the Lisbon Treaty a key issue in their European election campaign, which saw Labour beaten into third place by the Eurosceptic UK Independence Party.

One alternative that member states may offer the Government is a legal decision on the guarantees issued by the European Council. This would have legal standing but would enshrine the guarantees in the EU treaties.

Several EU states such as the Netherlands and Sweden are also concerned about the implications of the Irish guarantee on ethical issues. Warsaw secured its own opt-out from the charter of fundamental rights on ethical issues.

The Netherlands and Sweden want to ensure that the Irish guarantee on ethical issues does not override existing EU rights that Ireland has signed up to such as the freedom to work or travel abroad in EU states.

11/06/09

Catholic bishops stand firm on schools

Ireland's Catholic bishops have reiterated their commitment to providing “Catholic schools to cater for the needs of parents who wish their children to have a Catholic education”.

11/06/09
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Secular Left dealt blow in Euro elections

Socialist parties across Europe were dealt a serious blow in European Parliament elections at the weekend, as the Socialist group in the parliament, the PSE, lost 20 MEPs throughout the EU.

09/06/09
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Mother objects to son being placed with same-sex couple

A Catholic mother in the UK is taking legal advice after Brighton and Hove Council arranged to place her ten-year-old son with a homosexual foster couple.

09/06/09
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Institute for Marriage and Public Policy

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Family Facts

Family & Life

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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.