The right of legal self-defense develops mainly on the idea that individuals should be given the right to harm others and, in some cases, the right to protect their property. In most countries today, the principle itself is not a controversy itself - it is logical that the legal system provides certain civilian self-defense protection under certain circumstances. The real controversy comes from the amount of power the victim should have in a given environment.
Whether it is a mother or a father, a single mother or a single father, children need guidance. They will be the product of their teachings from a young age, and these children are emotionally influenced by their love and compassion cultivation. Regardless of what kind of family composition it means, one day they can be given to their families are respected and must be strong moral values.
The number of single parent families led by single mother and single father is increasing. In 1970 there was a single parent of 3 million, 393,000 people, and in 2006 there were 10 million single parents and 2.3 million single parents (US Census Bureau, 2005). More than 60% of children in America are living their lives in their own parent families (Simmons and O'Connell, 2003). These families have many of the same problems with different families like the demand for high quality daycare, but the single parent family has some unique problems. Parents usually share responsibility and supervision for their children and encourage and train as necessary. If there is only one parent, that parent must be the only economical and child - rearing resource and must be expanded to cover both areas.
Many of the children born to marry live in a single parent house, usually single mother is led. The proportion of children living alone in their parent families varies from country to country. At the lowest level, less than 10% of children live in their parent families, and 30 are mainly developing countries, including China, India, Indonesia, Israel, Jordan and Turkey. In Africa countries in Latin America, high-level single parent families are seen, nearly 40% of children live with their mothers, and about 4% live with their fathers. Other countries with many parent families such as Mozambique (36%), Dominican Republic (35%), Liberia (31%), Kenya (30%),