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Family

Nov. 28, 2000

User Friendly

Many people who need court orders in family-law matters either can't afford an attorney or don't want an attorney.

        By Shelley L. Albaum, Harold J. Cohn and Seth D. Kramer
        
        When a parent or spouse wants to obtain a child-support order, establish child-custody rights, get divorced or address any of the other rights and responsibilities that fall within the general rubric of "family law," he or she has no option but to go to court ...

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