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What do you mean by children who don't live together?
Question 1: It is stipulated that "children living together" does not include adult children who can live independently. Why do parents have no obligation to support adult children who have reached the age of 18?

Question 2: Declaration of family property * * * Children living together are considered as children living together: minor children and adult children who cannot live independently. * * * The Provisions of the General Office of the Central Committee and the General Office of the State Council on Reporting Personal Matters by Leading Cadres clearly stipulates this:

Article 1 and Article 4 Leading cadres shall report the following income, real estate, investment and other matters:

(1) My salary and various bonuses, allowances and subsidies;

(two) income from giving lectures, writing, consulting, reviewing manuscripts, painting and calligraphy;

(three) the real estate situation of himself, his spouse and children living together;

(4) I, my spouse and children living together invest in or otherwise hold securities, stocks (including equity incentives), futures, funds, investment insurance and other financial products;

(5) Spouses and children living together invest in unlisted companies and enterprises;

(6) Individual industrial and commercial households, sole proprietorship enterprises or partnerships registered by spouses and children living together.

Two, the second and third paragraphs of article eighteenth are:

The children who live together as mentioned in Article 4 of these Provisions refer to the minor children of leading cadres and the adult children who are raised by them and cannot live independently.

The term "real estate" as mentioned in Item (3) of Article 4 of these Provisions refers to the house where the leading cadres themselves, their spouses and children living together are the owners or co-owners.

Question 3: What is the situation that the children of leading cadres who declare important personal matters live together? Children who declare major personal matters and live together refer to minor children of leading cadres and adult children who are raised by them and cannot live independently.

Question 4: Is the guardianship responsibility of the party who lives with the children the same as that of the party who does not live with the children? Of course not.

One lives together.

Must play the role of care and supervision.

One is not together.

However, we have to fulfill the obligation of raising.

Question 5: What is the cohabitation of children? Children who are not able to live independently live with their parents.

These are the children who live together.

Question 6: I don't know who the "cohabiting" children are. This request has been made many times, but the property of officials is always not reported, which makes the people very headache. It is estimated that there are two possibilities: first, officials have no property, no money and no money to report; Second, the property of officials can continue to grow like house prices, and the report can't keep up with the growth, so it should continue to report. There are three kinds of people who require to declare their property: officials, their spouses and children living together. The first two kinds of people are easy to understand. Children living together belong to a new category of anthropology, sociology and law. I tried my best to look up the dictionary, literature and rules, but I couldn't find out the definition and origin of "cohabiting children". Nor can I find the definition of "living together": spouse, parents, grandparents, grandparents, grandchildren and grandchildren. Let's make a bold guess that the so-called "common life" may refer to the geographical concept from sharing the same bed, room, hospital, street, district, city, hometown to the same ball. It may also refer to the physiological concept of keeping vital signs together at the same time. Or at the same time refers to the legal concept of mutual recognition of father-son relationship. Or it refers to the mutual recognition of literary concepts and deep love ... taking out the property of officials and their relatives to bask in the sun would have won great popular support and helped stabilize the ruling. But if you come out to bask in the sun and take a portable sunshade to prop it up when you are afraid of the dark, it will be just like playing a TV series. No matter how many sequels there are, you will act after all. If you play too much, no one will watch. ? Children are no different, afraid of being classified by the sun, poor parents. 20 10 April 26th

Question 7: Does the family members living together mentioned in the rural subsistence allowance include children who have set up another portal? If you have three sons to start a new stove, I'm afraid you won't enjoy the minimum living allowance. They must accept alimony.

Question 8: Do parents and children live together when they work in different provinces? Neither parents nor children work in the same province. Of course, they don't belong together, but you shouldn't always be in this state. If you don't live apart from your parents, you may still live with your parents after you end your working life!

Question 9: How does the law define the members living together in the Regulations on Minimum Living Security? (1) The head of the household and family members should have legal obligations to support, support and support; (2) Both husband and wife and their unmarried children, adopted children and stepchildren are regarded as members of the same family; (3) Parents are both dead, and brothers and sisters live together with underage brothers and sisters; (4) Grandchildren who are unmarried or unable to live independently with their parents dead and grandparents as guardians; (5) Married children who share a household registration book with their parents should be calculated separately; (6) Legal couples and unmarried children who have two or more household registration books but live together are counted as one household; (7) College students who move their registered permanent residence to other places because of going to school are regarded as family members; (8) Persons with disabilities who live with their parents and are over 18 years of age, who hold first-and second-class disability certificates and lose their ability to work, and whose parents are over 50 years of age and have low incomes are regarded as independent households; (9) Persons serving or serving sentences in the family are counted as family members.

Question 10: How to define family members in law? 1. Children who are unmarried after adulthood and still live with their parents belong to the family;

When the child becomes an adult, if he is healthy and able to work, his parents will no longer have the obligation to support him. If you are unmarried and have no house, your parents still allow you to continue living, because family members have the obligation to support each other. If the relationship between the two sides deteriorates, parents strongly demand that their children move out. In this case, parents have no legal obligation to support. If the mediation fails, the child will move out of the house owned by his parents!

The relationship between family members needs legal and moral adjustment. Whether you need to move out depends on the relationship between the two parties. If it is adjusted by law, it should move out.

3. How should parents inherit their property when they die? If there is a valid will, it shall be inherited according to the will; If there is no will, according to the legal inheritance, the law stipulates that the parents, spouse and children of the decedent are the first heirs, and their rights are equal, which should be divided equally in principle.

4. Family member is not a strict legal term. The general understanding is: relatives of a family who live together. More refers to parents, siblings, grandparents or grandparents.

5.20 10 On April 27th, the State Council and the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development jointly issued a document on the management of affordable housing, which included the words "purchaser" and "family". "Families who have purchased affordable housing must turn affordable housing into fully-owned housing when purchasing fully-owned housing (that is, commercial housing)". Here comes a question about "family": If parents buy affordable housing and adult children buy commercial housing a few years later, does it mean that parents should turn affordable housing into commercial housing? There is no clear definition of family in marriage law, so are adult children still legal family members? There is no clear explanation about this matter.