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@misc{1499016, author = {Králíčková, Zdeňka and Kornel, Martin and Zavadilová, Lucie}, address = {Rijeka}, edition = {2019}, keywords = {marriage - man and woman - the same sex people - divorce - foreigners - statistics - family law - succession law}, language = {eng}, location = {Rijeka}, publisher = {European Union´s Justice Programme (2014 - 2020)}, title = {Personalised Solution in European Family and Succession Law - Czech Republic National Report}, url = {https://www.euro-family.eu/eu-home}, year = {2019} }
TY - GEN ID - 1499016 AU - Králíčková, Zdeňka - Kornel, Martin - Zavadilová, Lucie PY - 2019 TI - Personalised Solution in European Family and Succession Law - Czech Republic National Report VL - No. 80082-JUST-AG-2017/JUST-JCOO-2017 PB - European Union´s Justice Programme (2014 - 2020) CY - Rijeka KW - marriage - man and woman - the same sex people - divorce - foreigners - statistics - family law - succession law UR - https://www.euro-family.eu/eu-home N2 - A study commissioned by the European Commission revealed that already in 2002 more than 5 million EU citizens were living in a Member State of which they had not the nationality, and some 2.5 million items of real property were owned by spouses in Member States different from that of their residence (Green Paper, COM (2006) 400 final). According to data extracted in 2016 by Eurostat, a little more than a fifth of EU households in 2014 included at least one immigrant, regardless of migration generation or migration background (First and second-generation immigrants – statistics on households). Furthermore, it was reported in 2017 that a total of 4.7 million people immigrated to one of the EU-28 MSs during 2015 (2.4 million from a non-EU MS), while at least 2.8 million emigrants have left an EU MS (Migration and migrant population statistics). Apparently, there is a large number of transnational families in EU. Based on the citizenship of their members, these families may be intra-EU, mixed EU, and non-EU. They also differ in their structure (traditional nuclear, extended, single-parent, childless or singles), in their formal legal recognition (married, registered or de facto couples) or in their sexual composition (heterosexual or homosexual), and much of these differences are related to the values and cultural and social codes dominant in the countries their members originate from. Precisely because of these differences, all transnational families experience similar problems when faced with legal issues appearing as parts of their “everyday life”. In a view of those social developments, the Regulation (EU) No 650/2012 on jurisdiction, applicable law, recognition and enforcement of decisions and acceptance and enforcement of authentic instruments in matters of succession and on the creation of a European Certificate of Succession, and more recently the Council Regulation (EU) 2016/1103 in matters of matrimonial property regimes and the Council Regulation (EU) 2016/1104 in matters of the property consequences of registered partnerships have been added to the EU legislation on private international law. The project is intended to make available the tools for raising awareness of the new legislative instruments and especially of their specific mechanisms which are aimed at securing more legal certainty to transnational families when it comes to their property relations. ER -
KRÁLÍČKOVÁ, Zdeňka, Martin KORNEL a Lucie ZAVADILOVÁ. \textit{Personalised Solution in European Family and Succession Law - Czech Republic National Report}. 2019. vyd. Rijeka: European Union´s Justice Programme (2014 - 2020), 2019, 55 s. No. 80082-JUST-AG-2017/JUST-JCOO-2017.
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