Polyamorous Relationships

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Polyamorous relationships are relationships involving more than two adults; someone who identifies as polyamorous is or prefers to be in a relationship with more than one other person at a time. Polyamorous relationships are tremendously diverse. They may include adults who are married to each other and adults who have had children together. The people in a polyamorous relationship may or may not identify as a family, they may or may not live together, and they may or may not own property together. Not only are polyamorous relationships diverse, they are complicated.

This section provides an introduction to polyamorous relationships and how polyamorous relationships work in the context of family law. Because each province and territory has its own laws about who is entitled to parent children, ask for child support, ask for spousal support, and ask to divide property, the information in this page only applies to people who live in British Columbia. If you live outside of British Columbia and are entering or leaving a polyamorous relationship, you must speak to a family law lawyer in your area for accurate information about how family law may affect you.



Introduction

They might be about emotional connections, sexual connections, or both or neither. They might come with expectations of commitment, interdependence and expectations of sexual fidelity or they might not. They

Polyamorous relationships vary in nature, in terms of commitment, interdependence, and expectations of sexual and emotional fidelity. An individual may be simultaneously involved in two romantic relationships without those partners being in a relationship with each other, or significant, committed relationships may exist among all involved. An individual may be involved in a core dyadic or polyamorous relationship that is committed and enduring, while one or more members of that relationship maintain peripheral sexual relationships with others. Or, an individual may be involved in a number of concurrent relationships that are more sexual than romantic in nature and involve a diminished sense of interdependence.


Resources and links

Legislation

Links


This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by JP Boyd, 27 February 2020.


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