Japanese Surname Law Faces Legal Challenge

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Five people in Japan are reportedly preparing an unprecedented legal challenge against the Japanese government. Why? They claim that a civil law forcing them to choose a single surname after marriage violates their constitutional rights. If they succeed, married men and women in Japan will for the first time be able to retain their own surnames, removing one of Japan’s few remaining legal obstacles to gender equality.

In the vast majority of cases in Japan, women are required to relinquish their maiden name after marriage, although a small number of men take their wife’s maiden name as their new surname. Critics, however, say the time has come to modernise the law surrounding marital surnames in Japan – the only G8 nation with laws governing such matters.

The five challengers of the law argue that the law’s requirement that a single surname be chosen contradicts articles of Japan’s constitution guaranteeing individual liberty and equal rights to husband and wife. The five are also seeking 1m Japanese Yen each in compensation …

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One in Five Women Childless by Age 45

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One in five women is childless by the time they reach their mid-forties, according to new figures showing that fertility rates have fallen to a 44-year low. At the same time, the number of women having children over the age of 40 has almost doubled in the last decade as women delay motherhood for longer periods of time.

The figures also found that, among younger mothers, marriage is increasingly being sidelined, with almost three times as many women in their early 20s giving birth while single or cohabiting than as part of a married couple.

Analysts have said the these new figures suggest that more women are delaying starting a family because they are focused on their careers, and because they take longer to find the right man. Rising property prices and the cost of living have also been cited as a reason …

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