PROBLEMS OF SOCIAL ORPHANHOOD

Authors

  • Anna Vladimirovna Babushkina Shuya City Court, Ivanovo Region, Shuya, Russia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33184/vest-law-bsu-2022.13.4

Keywords:

orphan, social orphan, family, parents, modern society, social services, prevention

Abstract

Each stage in the history the State legal development of society differs the problems that require its own temporary solution. Social orphanhood is such a problem. Social orphanhood is the presence of homeless children with living parents who, for some reason, do not want or cannot raise their children. Social orphanhood is one of the most undesirable phenomena in the life of modern Russian society, because it is directly related to the preparation for life of a new generation of citizens of the country, physically and morally healthy, confident that they are the most necessary and desirable for both their parents and the whole society. The presence of such a negative phenomena testifies to the crisis of the family institution, its inability to withstand the social, economic and political transformations taking place in a modern state.

Author Biography

Anna Vladimirovna Babushkina, Shuya City Court, Ivanovo Region, Shuya, Russia

Judge Assistant, Shuya City Court, Ivanovo Region

References

Бурова Е.В. Правовое и духовно-нравственное содержание принципа приоритета семейного воспитания в российском праве / Е.В. Бурова // Семейное и жилищное право. – 2020. – No 6. – С. 3–6.

Ергашев Е.Р. Проблемы профилактики семейного неблагополучия, безнадзорности и правонарушений несовершеннолетних / Е.Р. Ергашев, Р.В.Бобина // Электронное приложение к «Российскому юридическому журналу». – 2019. – No 3. – С. 59–63.

Носова К.В. Дети-сироты и дети, оставшиеся без попечения родителей / К.В. Носова // Молодой ученый. – 2019. – No 31. – С. 115–118.

Published

2022-04-15 — Updated on 2022-09-20

Versions

How to Cite

[1]
Бабушкина, .А.В. 2022. PROBLEMS OF SOCIAL ORPHANHOOD. Bulletin of the Institute of Law of the Bashkir State University. 5, 1 (Sep. 2022), 27–32. DOI:https://doi.org/10.33184/vest-law-bsu-2022.13.4.

Issue

Section

CIVIL LAW; BUSINESS LAW; FAMILY LAW; PIL