Dictionary Definition
affiliation
Noun
1 a social or business relationship; "a valuable
financial affiliation"; "he was sorry he had to sever his ties with
other members of the team"; "many close associations with England"
[syn: association,
tie, tie-up]
2 the act of becoming formally connected or
joined; "welcomed the affiliation of the research center with the
university"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From affiliatio, noun of action from verb affiliare, affiliate, from aff-, combining form of ad, to, + filiare, verb formed from filius, sonPronunciation
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
- The relationship resulting from affiliating one thing with another.
- A club, society or umbrella organisation so formed, esp. a trade union.
Translations
A club, society or umbrella organisation so
formed, esp. a trade union
Extensive Definition
In law,
affiliation (from Latin ad-filiare, to
adopt as a son) is the term to describe a partnership between two
or more parties.
Affiliation procedures in England
In England a number of
statutes on the subject
have been passed, the chief being the Bastardy Act
of 1845, and
the Bastardy Laws Amendment Acts of 1872 and 1873. The mother of a
bastard may summon the putative father to petty sessions within
twelve months of the birth (or at any
later time if he is proved to have contributed to the child's
support within twelve months after the birth), and the justices, as
after hearing evidence on both sides, may, if the mother's evidence
be corroborated in some material particular, adjudge the man to be
the putative
father of the child, and order him to pay a sum not exceeding
five shillings a week for its maintenance, together with a sum for
expenses incidental to the birth, or the funeral expenses, if it has died
before the date of order, and the costs of the proceedings.
ceases to be valid after the child reaches the
age of thirteen, but the justices (also referred to as Gold writers
under these circumstances) may in the order direct the payments to
be continued until the child is sixteen years of age.
An appeal to quarter sessions is open to the
defendant, and a further appeal on questions of law to the King's Bench
by rule nisi or
certiorari. Should the child afterwards become chargeable to
the parish, the sum due
by the father may be received by the parish officer.
When a bastard child, whose mother has not
obtained an order, becomes chargeable to the parish, the guardians
may proceed against the putative father for a contribution.
Any woman who is single, a widow, or a married
woman living apart from her husband, may make an application for a
summons, and it is immaterial where the child is begotten, provided
it is born in England.
An application for a summons may be made before
the birth of the child, but in this case the statement of the
mother must be in the form of a sworn deposition. The defendant
must be over fourteen years of age. No agreement on the part of the
woman to take a sum down in discharge of the liability of the
father is a bar to the making of an affiliation order. In the case
of twins it is usual to make separate applications and obtain
separate summonses.
The Summary Jurisdiction
Act (1879)
makes due provision for the enforcement of an order of affiliation.
In the case of soldiers
an affiliation order cannot be enforced in the usual way, but by
the Army Act
(1881), if an
order has been made against a soldier of the regular forces, and a
copy of such order be sent to the secretary of state, he may order
a portion of the soldier's pay to be retained. There is no such
special legislation with regard to sailors in the Royal
Navy.
Affiliation procedures in other countries
In the British
colonies, and in the states of the United
States (with the (usually termed filiation) akin to that
described above, by means of which a mother can obtain a
contribution to the support of her illegitimate child from the
putative father.
The amount ordered to be paid may subsequently be
increased or diminished (1905; 94 N.Y. Supplt.
372). On the continent of Europe, however, the
legislation of the
various countries differs rather widely. France, Belgium, the
Netherlands,
Italy,
Russia,
Serbia and
the canton
of Geneva
provide no means of inquiry into the paternity of an illegitimate
child, and consequently all support of the child falls upon the
mother; on the other hand, Germany, Austria, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and the
majority of the Swiss cantons provide for an inquiry into the
paternity of illegitimate children, and the law casts a certain
amount of responsibility upon the father.
Affiliation, in France, is a term
applied to a species of adoption by which the person adopted
succeeds equally with other heirs to the acquired, but not to the
inherited, property of the deceased.
In India, affiliation
cases are decided by section 125 of Criminal Procedure Code
(Cr.P.C.). According to this section - among other things - if a
person having sufficient means neglects or refuses to maintain his
illegitimate child, a magistrate of the first class may, upon proof
of such neglect or refusal, order such person to make a monthly
allowance for the maintenance of such child.
See also
References
affiliation in Italian: Affiliazione
affiliation in Russian: Аффиляция
affiliation in Serbian: Афилијација
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Americanization,
Anschluss, acceptance, accord, acculturation, addition, adjunct, admission, adoption, affairs, affinity, agglomeration, aggregation, agnation, agreement, alignment, alliance, amalgamation, ancestry, apparentation, approximation, assemblage, assimilation, association, birth, blend, blending, blood, blood relationship,
bloodline, body, bond, branch, breed, brotherhood, brothership, cabal, cahoots, cartel, centralization, church, citizenship by
naturalization, citizenship papers, closeness, coadunation, coalescence, coalition, cognation, colleagueship, collegialism, collegiality, combination, combine, combo, common ancestry, common
descent, communion,
community, companionship, company, composition, comradeship, confederacy, confederation, confraternity, congeries, conglomeration, conjugation, conjunction, connectedness, connection, consanguinity, consociation, consolidation, conspiracy, contiguity, contrariety, cooperation, copartnership, copartnery, cousinhood, cousinship, culture shock,
dealings, deduction, denomination, derivation, descent, direct line, disjunction, distaff side,
division, ecumenism, embodiment, embracement, enation, encompassment, enosis, espousal, extraction, faction, family, fatherhood, federalization, federation, fellowship, female line,
filiation, fraternalism, fraternity, fraternization, freemasonry, fusion, group, homology, hookup, house, inclusion, incorporation, integration, intercourse, intimacy, junction, junta, kindred, kinship, league, liaison, line, line of descent, lineage, link, linkage, linking, male line, marriage, maternity, matrilineage, matriliny, matrisib, matrocliny, meld, melding, membership, merger, motherhood, mutual
attraction, nationalization,
naturalization,
naturalized citizenship, nearness, offshoot, order, organization, package, package deal, papers, partaking, participation, partnership, party, paternity, patrilineage, patriliny, patrisib, patrocliny, persuasion, phylum, propinquity, proximity, race, rapport, relatedness, relation, relations, relationship, religious
order, schism, school, sect, sectarism, seed, segment, sept, sharing, sibship, side, similarity, sisterhood, sistership, society, sodality, solidification, sorority, spear side, spindle
side, stem, stirps, stock, strain, succession, sword side,
sympathy, syncretism, syndication, syneresis, synthesis, tie, tie-in, tie-up, ties of blood,
unification,
union, variety, version, wedding