jc tuition singapore


Posted March 27, 2020 by sherkhansahu

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Issues in Marriage

One of the most silent aspects of marriage is the issue of marital rape. Widely ignored by law across many countries, the reluctance in intervention is due to traditional attitudes that women must be submissive to their husbands. Since marriage was understood to be an institution where a husband had control over his wife, the control over sexuality was also subsumed.
According to a 2017 UN report, while two thirds of countries in the world have laws in place against domestic violence, many countries still have not enacted legislation explicitly criminalizing marital rape. According to the report, as of April 2017, only 52 countries had amended their legislation to explicitly make marital rape a criminal offence (including, for example Canada, Australia, Denmark, Turkey, Brazil, South Africa, and Rwanda); 127 countries have not yet taken this step.
In Singapore, Section 375 of the Criminal Penal Code only applies to marital rape if formal legal steps have been taken towards separation or other termination of the marital relationship, or if the woman has taken steps to obtain specific legal protection, such as a Personal Protection Order against violent attack. There are no concrete numbers on marital rape in Singapore. The issue of marital rape was raised in India, but was rejected by Indian parliament in 2014 due to the potential that it will have serious repercussions on the family unit if marital rape was legalized.
Domestic violence is another closet issue seldom discussed and highlighted in mainstream media. Domestic violence takes place because the offender believes that abuse is an acceptable response to a situation they are facing. In rare cases, the both partners may engage in insulting or violent behavior, but in most instances, there is a cycle of abuse which gets more violent over time. Power and control, insufficient financial resources, and even family pressures may prevent the victim from taking action. They continue to stay in the abusive relationship feeling powerless.
Other less serious issues but can have a heavy toll on marriage is stress. Couples may be preoccupied with thoughts that prevent them from sharing, talking or being intimate. In tandem with being tired, overwhelmed with work at the office or home, chronic complaining can create a big impact in a relationship. In some cases impotency is a cause of divorce, particularly when progeny is an essential part of culture and status of a family.
Dissolution of marriage through divorce can be traumatic and even costly. The process affects distribution of property, division of debt, child custody, and every aspect that governed the estranged marriage. Divorce is only granted when one party in the marriage has been at fault under statutory grounds. No-fault divorces are granted in some countries simply based on assertion that there are ‘irreconcilable differences’ or ‘irretrievable breakdown’.
Divorce is currently illegal in Philippines. The process to end a marriage is annulment. An annulment simply voids the marriage as if it never took place. A couple may separate for various reasons, such as marital abandonment, homosexuality or spousal abuse. The impact of divorce is often linked to the development and mental well being of children. There is significant evidence that children of divorced parents are more likely to divorce themselves. Academically, children of divorced parents also do not perform well in school.
Divorce rates around the world are on the rise but statistics can be misleading for some countries or cultures. One such measure is the divorce to marriage ratio. The ratio calculates the number of divorces to the number of marriages in a given year. In a country where there are 5 divorces and 10 marriages in a given year in a given area, the ratio would be one divorce for every two marriages, yielding 50% as the divorce to marriage ratio. By this ratio, most European countries, Canada and America have a divorce to marriage ratio of 50% and above. Singapore, Israel, Qatar, Thailand and at least two dozen other countries have the ratio between 25-30%.
This method of calculation does not take into account that couples could have been married for several years before separating. Also the couples who divorced were not the same couples who got married. Based on UN statistics, the most reflective figure for divorce rates around the world is a range of 1.2 to 2.5 divorces per 1000 people. The divorce rate in Singapore is 1.8 per 1000 people. This figure seems more meaningful and less shocking than the crude divorce to marriage ratio.

Consider this:
The wedding band is the smallest handcuff in the world. Discuss.

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Last Updated March 27, 2020