Introduction to Family Law (3:I): Difference between revisions

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{{REVIEWED LSLAP | date= July 7th, 2023}}
{{REVIEWED LSLAP | date= June 23rd, 2024}}
{{LSLAP Manual TOC|expanded = family}}
{{LSLAP Manual TOC|expanded = family}}



Revision as of 18:51, 30 August 2024

This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by the Law Students' Legal Advice Program on June 23rd, 2024.



A. Note on the Family Law Act and this Manual

On March 18, 2013, British Columbia’s Family Law Act [FLA] came into force. The FLA is the culmination of many years of research and policy development, and has transformed British Columbia family law dramatically .

The current Manual chapter deals primarily with the FLA rather than the previous Family Relations Act [FRA]. If you are starting a legal challenge in family law now or in the future, the FLA will apply to your case. However, if you made a claim for property division before the FLA came into force or if you are making a claim to enforce, set aside, or replace an agreement respecting property division made before the FLA came into force (March 18, 2013), then those claims will be decided under the FRA; all of your other claims (such as for parenting arrangements, child support, spousal support) will be dealt with under the FLA, or the Divorce Act (DA), if it applies.

If your case still involves the FRA, we encourage you to look at an older version of this Manual, as we will not deal with the FRA in this version.

© Copyright 2024, The Greater Vancouver Law Students' Legal Advice Society.