An emancipated child is considered an adult. They are entitled to receive any benefits assigned to them. If they are not emancipated, the money will go into a trust for them.
There should not be a problem. They can register themselves if they meet the requirements for attendance.
Become emancipated. Get a lawyer and go before a judge.
Yes, if there's a significant change in either parent's circumstances, or one child has emancipated or died.
Yes. A child can only be emancipated after a court has held a hearing, and the court finds that emancipation is in the child's best interest.
To get emancipated you would have to go to the courts and prove you can live on your own. Then you will have to do things on your own because your parents would not be legally responsible for you anymore.
Depends. If you are over 18 you are all ready an adult. If you are under 18 you are a minor with a child. The fact that you have a child doesn't mean you are an adult. To become legally emancipated you need to go before a judge and prove you can support yourself and the child.
No, she is not emancipated just because she is pregnant. In order to do so she has to go to court and prove she can take care of herself by providing support for herself and the child.
If your child is an emancipated minor and you are required by law to pay the child support then those responsibilities to pay the child support do not just go away. You are supposed to go to family court and take your case there. Just because your child is an emancipated minor does not mean that you are not supposed to pay child support any more.
Once you are emancipated, you are an adult. You can go where you wish.
To be emancipated, you would draft a Petition for Emancipation in accordance with your state's laws, and file it in the appropriate court. Emancipation has no effect on whether or not you can go to school.
You would have to either have someone else take over legal guardianship of the child or you could have your child emancipated as an adult, meaning that although they are technically a minor in age they are recognized legally by the state as an adult responsible for themselves. either way you have to go through the local court system to do it.