Gloria Viarengo (cur.), Unioni di fatto. Dal diritto romano ai diritti attuali, Torino 2016, pp. 150
Abstract
The book collects the acts of the International Convention regarding Unioni di fatto: dal
diritto romano ai diritti attuali held in Imperia in 2015. Common-law marriage – an ancient
social phenomenon – as a stable coexistence between two sentimentally related subjects who
can not, or do not want, to join in marriage. In the European context, the reaction of
individual legal systems has been heterogeneous and the different countries have tried to
strike a balance between legitimate unions and other types of union, both in relation to
children and regarding the protection of property rights and successors. The responses have
been different and adapted to the different legal systems. While in many European countries
non-marital unions have long been protected, a long process of maturing has been necessary
in Italy before reaching a law on common-law marriage. The curator of the volume, Gloria
Viarengo, brings together significant contributions that deepen the theme of coexistence and
common-law marriage from the point of view of the history of Roman, medieval, modern and
contemporary European law, with specific attention to the countries that have long protected
such cohabitation forms. (Germany, France, England).