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Family Law for the High-Net-Worth Client

Family Law for the High-Net-Worth Client

Buch | Hardcover
245 Seiten
2026
Globe Law and Business Ltd (Verlag)
978-1-83723-173-7 (ISBN)
CHF 319,95 inkl. MwSt
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The legal landscape governing ultra-high-net-worth (UHNW) and high-net-worth (HNW) families is evolving rapidly, especially as mobility and international relocation among non-domiciled individuals and British expatriates increases. For professional advisers and wealth-holding families, understanding the nuances of English family law – and how it compares to major wealth centres such as Singapore, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates and the United States – is essential for effective planning and risk management.

This book considers the key areas of family law relevant to UHNW families and their advisers as well as identifying important developments and trends for the future.

As international families continue to relocate and diversify their asset bases, an integrated and comparative approach to family law is vital. Advisers to UHNW and HNW families must have an understanding of evolving legal principles and the impact of cross-jurisdictional issues on wealth planning.

The family team and colleagues at Charles Russell Speechlys provide expert legal and practical guidance on how families can navigate the complex intersection of family, wealth and international law, including:

nuptial agreements – international considerations and legal challenges;
divorce proceedings – the importance and relevance of jurisdiction;
financial settlements – the interrelation of trusts, family businesses and offices, and cases with interveners;
private children law – key areas including disputes and relocation, and how this applies to the international family;
key family-law issues including education matters, transparency in the family court, privacy and reputation, and personal injunctions;
the rise of non-court dispute resolution with a focus on arbitration and mediation; and
comparative family law with key wealth centres across the globe.

This publication is a key resource for UHNW families and their advisers, and for those with family offices and those advising individuals when there may be a crossover with family-law issues.

Foreword
Piers Master

Introduction
Miranda Fisher

Part I. Nuptial agreements

Process and proposed reform
Miranda Fisher
Cara Fung

Enforcement/legal challenges and international agreements
Jamie Kennaugh
Charlotte Posnansky

Part II. Divorce proceedings

Jurisdiction and challenging jurisdiction/ Hemain injunctions
Matt Foster
Cara Fung
James Riby

Part III. Financial settlements

Development of the law
over the last 25 years including the treatment of inherited and family wealth and proposed reform – is London still ‘the divorce capital of the world’?
William Longrigg
Charlotte Posnansky

Treatment of trusts/ foundation assets in family proceedings and trust disputes
David Carver
Tom Denham Smith
Sara Higgins
Tom Watts

Acting for third-party intervenors including trustees and children
Zandra Beaumont
William Longrigg
Charlotte Posnansky

Treatment of family businesses and the role of the family office
Shona Alexander
James Elliott-Hughes

Part III of the Matrimonial & Family Proceedings Act 1984 (financial provision after overseas divorce)
Sarah Jane Boon
Matt Foster

Treatment of pensions
Sarah Higgins
Hannah Owen

Enforcement of orders including international enforcement and reciprocal obligations (EU and worldwide)
Jemimah Fleet
James Riby

Cohabitation agreements and claims available to co-habitants
Rebecca Arnold
Tom Denham Smith
Sophia Leeder
Tom Watts

Part IV. Private children law

Schedule 1 of the Children Act 1989 (financial provision for unmarried parents)
David Carver
Miranda Fisher

Residence and contact (including acting for parents and grandparents)
Hilde Braaten Resseth
Jamie Kennaugh

Applications for leave to remove children permanently from the jurisdiction and interplay with abduction
Sarah Jane Boon
Neeva Desai

Surrogacy (domestic and international)
Michael Wells-Greco
Hannah Owen

Disputes between parents on specific issues such as choice of school, payment of fees and other SPOs (medical treatment etc)
Shona Alexander
Isobel Asti
Emil Borrowdale

Part V. Key family law issues

Education Issues: legal disputes with schools regarding exclusion etc
Jamie Cartwright
Hannah Owen

Transparency in the Family Court and applications for reporting restrictions orders
Rebecca Arnold
Joshua Green

Privacy and reputation: injunctions for breach of confidence and defamation
Hannah Gornall
Claudine Morgan

Non-molestation and US/New York/California occupation orders: domestic violence injunctions
Isobel Asti
Joshua Green
Dhara Shah

Protection from stalking and harassment
David Haines

Arbitration: the rise of private arbitration in family proceedings and other ADR methods
Sarah Anticoni
Sarah Higgins

Part VI. Comparative family law

Switzerland
Michael Wells-Greco
Sirin Yuce

Hong Kong
Vanessa Duff
Hermia Wong
Kristie Wong
Lisa Wong

Italy
James Riby

Dubai
Miranda Fisher
Jemimah Fleet
Charlotte Posnansky

US/New York/California
Sarah Jane Boon
Jemimah Fleet
Jamie Kennaugh
Charlotte Posnansky
William Longrigg

Channel Islands
Sarah Higgins

India
Neeva Desai

Conclusion
Miranda Fisher

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.7.2026
Mitarbeit Berater: Miranda Fisher
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Maße 160 x 240 mm
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Wirtschaftsrecht
ISBN-10 1-83723-173-7 / 1837231737
ISBN-13 978-1-83723-173-7 / 9781837231737
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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