Biological father and son celebrating outside the Bundestag after law strengthens paternity rights for unmarried fathers.
Biological father and son celebrating outside the Bundestag after law strengthens paternity rights for unmarried fathers.
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Bundestag strengthens rights of biological fathers

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The Bundestag has passed a law making it easier for biological fathers to assert their paternity legally. The reform implements a ruling by the Federal Constitutional Court and lowers hurdles for unmarried fathers. The long fight of one father contributed to this success.

The Bundestag passed a law in the evening that strengthens the rights of biological fathers. This implements a ruling by the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe, which had demanded an effective procedure for biological fathers who are not married to the mother.

Previously, it was not possible to assert paternity if there was a social-familial relationship between the child and the legal father. The legal father bore responsibility without being the biological father. With the reform, the biological father can contest paternity if he has a close relationship with the child or if a previous relationship ended without his fault.

Additionally, a race for paternity is to be prevented: If the biological father has initiated proceedings to establish his paternity, no other man can acknowledge paternity until the decision.

The child's right to have a say is expanded: From 14 years old, it can prevent the mother from imposing another man as the legal father instead of the biological one.

The reform follows the long fight of one father, which had partial success, as reports indicate. It concerns family law and aims at better legal recognition of biological paternity.

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Reactions on X to the Bundestag's reform easing paternity challenges for biological fathers are minimal and mostly neutral. Major media outlets like Spiegel and Deutschlandfunk reported the law's passage factually. A fathers' rights representative criticized omissions such as no mandatory acceleration or ban on prenatal recognition, predicting future disputes. Legal commentators noted it in press reviews.

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A Brazilian father holding his newborn baby at home, representing the approved extension of paternity leave to 20 days starting in 2027.
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Lower house approves gradual extension of paternity leave to 20 days

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Brazil's lower house approved on Tuesday, November 4, a bill gradually extending paternity leave from 5 to 20 days, starting in 2027. The text, reported by Deputy Pedro Campos (PSB-PE), returns to the Senate for further review after amendments. The measure includes full government payment and additional benefits for specific cases.

The Bundestag will debate a new violence protection law for the first time on Friday, which can require violent offenders in high-risk cases to wear an electronic ankle bracelet. CSU politician Susanne Hierl welcomes the draft but calls for additional measures such as mandatory social training courses and consequences for custody rights in cases of violence against mothers.

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A growing number of local governments in Japan are making it easier for male workers to take paternity leave, aiming to retain staff amid ongoing population shifts to larger cities. In fiscal 2024, 58.5% of eligible male local government employees took child care leave, surpassing 50% for the first time. Among administrative officials, the rate reached 75%.

A woman has returned to her former husband after a 15-year separation, bringing four children she bore with different men. The couple parted due to family disputes and economic hardships. Her ex-husband has accepted her back on the condition that each child's biological father takes responsibility.

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German Justice Minister Stefanie Hubig (SPD) has rejected lowering the minimum age for criminal prosecution. This comes in the context of an alleged killing by a 12-year-old in Dormagen. Instead, she advocates for youth welfare and family courts.

On December 26, 2025, France's Ministry of Health and Families announced a delay for the new supplementary birth leave from January 1, 2026, to July 2026, citing technical rollout needs. Parents of children born or adopted from January to May 2026 can access it until year-end. The reform, part of a push against declining birth rates, supplements existing maternity and paternity leaves.

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The Ministry of Public Service will present on Tuesday, January 27, its initial reform tracks on paid special leave authorizations for public agents, related to parenthood and family events. This move responds to a Council of State injunction from December 10, 2025, requiring a decree within six months under the 2019 public service transformation law. Unions are already denouncing a potential reduction in rights regarding child care.

 

 

 

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