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Abstract

Roughly twenty-five years ago, Professor Homer Clark published his masterful treatise on family law, Domestic Relations. In the chapter on divorce, Professor Clark described the criticisms of the then-common "fault" grounds for divorce, and the necessity of fitting within an artificial category of fault grounds before a court would grant a divorce. He then detailed the decline of fault principles and the genesis of the "no-fault divorce" movement, and described some early reactions to this revolution in domestic relations.

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