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12 Laws 1 (2023)

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Article

Parent-Child Relationship in the Civil Code of China

Wenting  You


School of Law, Shanxi University, Taiyuan 030006, China; youwenting@163.com

Abstract: The purpose of this article is to familiarize readers with the Chinese Civil Code, which
entered into force in early 2021, and to draw their attention to the changes brought about by the
Marriage and Family Book, which  is now included in Volume V of the new code. The paternity
system best reflects the changes in the Chinese Marriage and Family Book, especially Article 1073.
A complete paternity system includes presumption, claim, and denial of the parent-child relationship.
However, Article 1073 of the Civil Code, which regulates the parent-child relationship, is a guiding
provision with a lack of operational rules. It is necessary to make general rules for operation and
enforcement by adding  supporting rules, including the presumption of legitimate children, the
claim of children born out of wedlock, the denial of legitimate children, and other operational rules,
to resolve paternity disputes. The Civil Code also makes changes to the adoption system in the
Marriage and Family Book, mainly by further restricting the conditions for adopters with the aim
of protecting the interests of the adoptee children. Although the Chinese Civil Code retains the
concepts of legitimate and illegitimate children, in essence, there is no difference in their rights and
legal status, including the right to inheritance. In conclusion, the legislative norms of paternity
determination improve the Chinese paternity system, but lack operability, and it is important to
accumulate experience through practice and draw on custom and jurisprudence to develop specific
operational rules that complement the legislative provisions. This is exactly what this paper will
address and the knowledge gap it will fill.

Keywords:  marriage and family law; private law; parent-child relationship; presumption; adoption;
denial of legitimate children


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Citation: You, Wenting. 2023.
Parent-Child Relationship in the Civil
Code of China. Laws 12: 1. https://
doi.org/10.3390/lawsl2OlOOOl

Academic Editor: Patricia Easteal

Received: 19 November 2022
Revised: 18 December 2022
Accepted: 19 December 2022
Published: 22 December 2022




Copyright: © 2022 by the author.
Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
This article is an open access article
distributed  under the terms and
conditions of the Creative Commons
Attribution (CC BY) license (https://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/
4.0/).


1. Introduction
     The Chinese  Civil Code  strives to include all current legal rules in the realm of civil
affairs into its 1260 items in a methodical manner. It is a codification and revision of Chinese
civil legal norms, in the same structure as the Swiss, German, and Japanese civil codes. It
is split into seven volumes: General  Provisions, Property, Contracts, Personality Rights,
Marriage  and  Family, Succession,  and  Torts. The 2020  codification is a recombination
of existing minor  acts, a compilation that does not change  the fundamentals   of present
regulations. It is neither a reinterpretation of existing texts nor the establishment of new
private law, but rather the integration of pre-existing laws.
     Paternity is a newly created institution that represents a significant development in
Chinese  family  law. It is included in Article 1073 of the Civil Code, which  represents
the paternity legal system in Chinese  civil law. The recognition or denial of paternity by
parents and  the recognition of paternity by adult children are consolidated in this article
of the Chinese  Civil Code. Even  though  there is only one article, it establishes the legal
framework   for parentage recognition in China and represents a significant step forward in
the development   of Chinese kinship law.
     Paternity confirmation  and  denial are both included  in the text. The first is pater-
nity confirmation, often known   as the claim of children born  out of wedlock,  in which
the biological father acknowledges  and  treats the child born out of marriage as his child.
On  the other hand, there is paternity denial. It is the disidentification of a child born in


Laws 2023, 12, 1. https: / /doi.org/10.3390/1aws12010001                                https:/ /www.mdpi.com/journal/laws


Laws 2023,12, 1. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws12010001


https://www.mdpi.com/journal/laws

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