élever sans obligation d"adoption - définition. Qu'est-ce que élever sans obligation d"adoption
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est élever sans obligation d"adoption - définition

Positive obligation; State obligation

Sans (Undertale)         
FICTIONAL CHARACTER FROM UNDERTALE
Draft:Sans (Undertale); Sans Undertale; Sans (character); Sans (Video game character); Sans the Skeleton; Sans (video game character); Sans (Toby Fox); Sans.
Sans is a fictional character created by Toby Fox for the 2015 role-playing video game Undertale. Initially appearing as a friendly NPC, he later becomes the de facto final boss if the player chooses to complete the "genocide route" and destroy the game's race of monsters.
Andalé Sans         
Andalé Sans (usually appearing as Andale Sans) is a proportional sans-serif typeface designed by Steve Matteson to complement its monospaced counterpart, Andalé Mono.
Same-sex adoption         
  • Unknown/ambiguous}}
  • Neither/unknown/ambiguous}}
  • No laws allowing adoption by same-sex couples}}
  • No laws allowing adoption by married same-sex couples}}
  • Lesbian couple with children
  • Neither same-sex adoption nor same-sex marriage allowed}}
ADOPTION OF CHILDREN BY LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDER (LGBT) PERSONS
Adoption by gay parents; Homosexual adoption; Gay adoption; Gay-adoption; Gay Adoption; Adoption by same-sex couples; Same-sex couple adoption; LGBT people adopting children; Public opinion on LGBT adoption; Legal status of LGBT adoption; Gay adoptions; LGBT adoption; Adoption rights for homosexual people
Same-sex adoption refers to the adoption of children by couples of the same legal sex or gender, which may take the form of a joint adoption by a same-sex couple or adoption by one partner of the other's biological child (step-child adoption). Joint adoption by same-sex couples is legal in twenty-seven countries as well as several subnational jurisdictions and dependent territories.

Wikipédia

Positive obligations

Positive obligations in human rights law denote a State's obligation to engage in an activity to secure the effective enjoyment of a fundamental right, as opposed to the classical negative obligation to merely abstain from human rights violations.

Classical human rights, such as the right to life or freedom of expression, are formulated or understood as prohibitions for the State to act in a way that would violate these rights. Thus, they would imply an obligation for the State not to kill, or an obligation for the State not to impose press censorship. Modern or social rights, on the other hand, imply an obligation for the State to become active, such as to secure individuals' rights to education or employment by building schools and maintaining a healthy economy. Such social rights are generally more difficult to enforce.

Positive obligations transpose the concept of State obligations to become active into the field of classical human rights. Thus, in order to secure an individual's right to family life, the State may not only be obliged to refrain from interference therein, but positively to facilitate for example family reunions or parents' access to their children.

The most prominent field of application of positive obligations is Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Important cases have been taken to the ECHR in Strasbourg which over the last ten years has moved to making positive obligations especially in the field of transsexuals right to decide if they want surgery to convert their bodies as far as possible from one sex to the other. Cases such as Van Kuck v Germany 2003 made it positive obligation on EU states to provide sex change surgery and this was repeated in the L v Lithuania 2007 verdict and again in the Schlump v Switzerland 2009 verdict. Because of this the Swiss Government and many other removed the need for a person to prove they needed sex change surgery in 2010. However, there are still countries, especially the UK, which refuse to accept the legality of the positive obligations on them regardless of the fact that this makes them liable to being found guilty of Article 8 violations. See ECHR Van Kuck v Germany 2003. See ECHR L V Lithuania 2007. See ECHR Schlumpf v Switzerland 2009.

In 2021, the ECHR ruled in Fedotova and Others v. Russia that there was a positive obligation to recognize same-sex partnerships based on article 8.