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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A paper which looks at registered marriage as an option to religious marriage in various cultures, and concludes than in the light of changing socio-cultural practices it is becoming an obsolete concept. Bibliography lists 6 sources
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JL5_JLregmarr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
or not registered marriage is outdated, it is useful to look briefly at how marriage is defined, the relationship between religious marriage and registered marriage, and the alternatives to the
matter which might reasonably considered as rendering it obsolete. Registered marriage is a legal contractual ceremony which is binding on both parties in civil law, and is carried out by
a celebrant, generally referred to as a registrar, who may also be responsible for registering births and deaths. Registered marriage can therefore be seen as one of legally recorded rites
of passage within the social community. The prevalence of registered
marriage, however, varies from one culture to another. In parts of the Indian subcontinent, as Bharatmatrimony (2003) and Contractor (2003) point out, it is actually gaining in popularity. Religious marriage,
especially amongst Hindus, is constrained by various rules and prescriptions and couples from different castes often find that a civil marriage is the only way in which they can circumvent
these rules. In addition, as Contractor notes, a civil marriage is much more economical than a big religious ceremony and this is something which modern couples find advantageous. In Hong
Kong, as Leung (2003) points out, registered marriage was welcomed by women as an integral part of their acquiring equal rights.
In other cultures, however, there is considerable debate as to whether both religious and registered marriage are still relevant to modern society. The
Christian Answers Network, for example, rejects both registered marriage and cohabiting as unacceptable, stating that despite the decline in popularity of marriage as an institution, it is still an essential
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