1. Divorce Source: a legal resource for divorce, custody, alimony, and support
A state specific divorce web site providing information and referrals for people facing and experiencing issues revolving around divorce, separation, child custody, support, alimony, family law and separation.
2. Heartchoice.com the Practical Professional Advice on Relationships
Heartchoice.com provides no-nonsense professional advice to individuals on a range of relationship topics. Within heartchoice.com a person can gain insight on such topics as divorce, marriage, advice on courtship, and sexual intimacy.
3. Articles.html
Articles.html
4. Divorce Interactive: Divorce Laws - Family Law - Divorce Lawyers
DivorceInteractive.com contains information, survival tools and resources on divorce laws, other aspects of family law and divorce lawyers and professionals.
5. Divorce Strategy For Men and Women
Your guide through the divorce maze. Discover how to reduce legal fees, stay out of court, maintain your parenting rights and find a light at the end of the tunnel.
6. DivorceLinks.com - Divorce Laws: Child Custody, Support, Visitation
State and Federal Divorce Laws: State-by State child support, visitation, child custody parenting plans, alimony, separation, mediation, co-parenting and divorce attorneys/lawyers/mediators links along with divorce/marriage support links.
Genetic DNA testing to evaluate paternity/parentage is possible because our biological characteristics are passed from generation to generation following the basic rules of inheritance. These rules have been known for more than a century. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), which is a very stable and strictly inherited molecule, encodes all genetic information and determines our biological characteristics. Modern DNA paternity testing relies on the fact that we can detect and study "DNA markers" at specific structural regions of the DNA. Many different DNA markers exist in the general population. However, only two such DNA markers exist in any one individual. A child inherits one DNA marker from the mother and one from the father. A DNA test begins by learning which DNA markers are present in the child and the mother. It is then possible to determine which of the child's DNA markers was inherited from the mother and which was inherited from the biological father. To evaluate paternity and complete a paternity test, a series of DNA tests is performed on the biological specimens provided by the mother, child, and alleged father. When the DNA Profiles™ of this trio are compared to each other, the paternity test will provide two possible results; the alleged father will be either included or excluded as the biological father of the child.
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