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  2. Hyde v Hyde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyde_v_Hyde

    With respect to marriage, English law could therefore not recognise either polygamy or concubinage as marriage. Similarly, he found that cultural traditions of which the court had no knowledge could not form the basis for a court decision. [8] The court dismissed John Hyde's claim. The case established the common law definition of marriage.

  3. Courtship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Courtship

    Communities exerted pressure on people to form pair-bonds in places such as Europe; in China, society "demanded people get married before having a sexual relationship" [4] and many societies found that some formally recognized bond between a man and a woman was the best way of rearing and educating children as well as helping to avoid conflicts ...

  4. Sociology of law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sociology_of_law

    Whereas “conventional legal scholarship looks inside the legal system to answer questions of society,” the “law and society movement looks outside, and treats the degree of autonomy, if any, as an empirical question.” [47] Moreover, law and society scholarship expresses a deep concern with the impact that laws have on society once they ...

  5. Defense of Marriage Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defense_of_Marriage_Act

    The Act's congressional sponsors stated, "[T]he bill amends the U.S. Code to make explicit what has been understood under federal law for over 200 years; that a marriage is the legal union of a man and a woman as husband and wife, and a spouse is a husband or wife of the opposite sex." [16]

  6. Marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage

    In other societies a person is expected to marry their cross-cousin, a woman must marry her father's sister's son and a man must marry his mother's brother's daughter – this is often the case if either a society has a rule of tracing kinship exclusively through patrilineal or matrilineal descent groups as among the Akan people of West Africa.

  7. Legal anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_anthropology

    Legal theorist H. L. A. Hart, however, stated that law is a body of rules, and is a union of two sets of rules: rules on conduct ("primary rules") [5] rules about recognizing, changing, applying, and adjudicating on rules on conduct ("secondary rules") [6] Within modern English Theory, law is a discrete and specialized topic.

  8. Everyone on dating apps wants banter. But what does ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/everyone-dating-apps-wants...

    At its most disappointing, banter may be branded on dating app bios but never experienced on a real date. At its most thrilling, banter mimics the buildup and climax of good sex. At its most ...

  9. Law in Modern Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_In_Modern_Society

    Aristocratic society's view of the relationship between the ideal and the actual occupies an intermediate position between the views of tribal and liberal society. In aristocratic society, there is an intense oscillation between a tendency to sanctify existing social arrangements and the tendency to oppose them to a higher heavenly perfection.