my friend lives in New Jersey if she has custody of her children can she move out of state and give her children a good life.
Joint Custody A New Kind of Family - 1984 was released on: USA: May 1984
The Dutch West India Company was a joint stock company that settled New Jersey. However the English took the colony away from the company.
A parent with sole custody should be able to move out of the state of New Jersey. This is unless there are explicit rules against it.
yes
In the event of a divorce, several states have laws concerning the presumptive joint custody of any children involved. The District of Columbia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Florida, Louisiana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, and Texas all have presumptive joint custody laws while many other states have laws preferential to joint custody when both parents agree to it.
no
No it is not. Adoption is permanent.
Yes. With joint custody either parent can change the kids school or any major desicion. The ideal relationship you would both agree on this but reality is always different.
With a new filing, yes.
Depends what you mean by "space left" in New Jersey.
If you mean east - its New York.
No, although it was rare in the past. Divorced families in times past sometimes worked out arrangements that were equivalent to modern joint custody (Ricci, 1981). For example, the Maryland Court of Appeals considered a case in 1934 in which the child had approximately equal time with each parent, although the term joint custody had not yet been invented. Joint custody began to increase in the late 1960s and 1970s, as courts found maternal preference laws to violate the 14th Amendment guarantee of equal protection under the law (Roth, 1976). [This answer was excerpted from "Questions and Answers About Joint Custody" by Rick Kuhn.] References: Ricci, I., Mom's House, Dad's House. Macmillan, 1981. Roth, A. The tender years presumption in child custody disputes. Journal of Family Law, Vol. 15, 1976.