Even though the title page continues to state 2004 and 9th edition, I have been reassured that the excellent Juvenile Rights Handbook written by members of the Multnomah Bar…
Search Results for: label/Juvenile
Update to “Leaving Children Home Alone in Oregon”
See recent update ( 2/10/11 ), but also click on the Home Alone label at the bottom of this post. In addition to my new Kids Home Alone in…
Power to Children and the Poor: Utility (power, light, and water) Service
Another type of law library question that we, and public libraries, start hearing as the weather gets colder: Where do I find the law that that says power…
Can Someone Use My Picture Without My Permission?
Can Someone Use My Picture Without My Permission? Public law librarians hear this question quite frequently and while we don’t really want to make our responses more complicated…
Oregon Foster Children’s Bill of Rights, Effective January 2014
Oregon 2013 Senate Bill 123: Requires the Department of Human Services to adopt rules to establish Oregon Foster Children’s Bill of Rights. (Use this link if that one…
Researching Oregon Paternity Law and Determinations
It’s time to update my 2008 post on Researching Oregon Paternity Law Depending on your specific question (and they do run the gamut!), here are some updated resources…
Oregon Babysitting, Home-Alone: Parents, Teens, and Children and the Law
See recent updates (e.g. 2/10/11, 6/15/09 ), but also click on the Home Alone label in the sidebar. The most frequently sought and read posts here at this…
Do Oregon circuit court judges have the power to review the decisions of other circuit court judges?
…before us in a unique procedural posture. In a juvenile dependency case that is entirely separate from the case at hand, defendant Waller, the Presiding Family Court Judge of the…
Oregon Constitution in Small Bites: Bite #8 (Bill of Rights, 43-45)
…throughout the criminal justice process and from the alleged youth offender or youth offender throughout the juvenile delinquency proceedings.(b) The right to have decisions by the court regarding the pretrial…
How Do I Apply For Emancipation From My Parents?
…What is emancipation? According to the Washington County Juvenile department, emancipation means “that a 16- or 17-year-old person can be given certain rights and responsibilities of an adult or 18-year-old person.” In Washington…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

