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Disownment Information

Disownment is the formal act or condition of forcibly renouncing or no longer accepting one's consanguineous child as a member of one's family or kin. It differs from giving a child up for adoption both in that it is a social and interpersonal issue (and therefore usually takes place later in the child's life, though children can be disowned by their parents at very young ages as well) and that it does not imply any arrangement for future care. In this sense it is comparable to divorce or repudiation (of a spouse). Disownment may entail disinheritance, familial exile, or shunning, and often a combination of the three. In many modern legal systems, it is considered a form of child abandonment and is against the law in most countries.

Family
Household · Nuclear family · Extended family · Conjugal family · Stepfamily · Dysfunctional family ·
Immediate family Spouse (Husband · Wife) · Parent (Father · Mother) · Child (Son · Daughter) · Sibling
Extended family Grandparent · Aunt · Uncle · Cousin · Nephew · Niece · Common ancestor
Family-in-law Father-in-law · Mother-in-law · Brother-in-law · Sister-in-law
Kinship Adoption · Affinity · Consanguinity · Disownment · Divorce · Fictive kinship · Marriage
Lineage Bilateral descent · Family name · Family tree · Genealogy · Heirloom · Heredity · Inheritance · Matrilineality · Patrilineality · Pedigree chart
Relationships Agape (parental love) · Eros (marital love) · Filial piety · Philia (friendly love) · Storge (familial love) · Veneration
Parenting
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