baby names
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baby names
how common is it for a married couple in finland to give the child the mothers last name as opposed to the fathers?

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- Posts: 93
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name
thanks hank.........ok then how common is it for a baby to get the mother name if parents are married in finland over the fathers name.

- strawberry
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Baby's name
Hiya,
Hank's right: if you're not married (I believe you are...?), baby will automatically be given Mum's surname AND Mum will automatically be a sole custodian... Non-married Dads have to declare paternity...
In married parents' case it's purely a question of choice: parents choose not only the given names but the which surname the child will have. As to how common it is to have Mum's surname: probably not very common but then not at all unheard of... I presume Mum's surname is chosen if it's fairly rare, for example, and parents wish the surname to live on. Other reasons may well apply, too. Good luck with your choice...
Hank's right: if you're not married (I believe you are...?), baby will automatically be given Mum's surname AND Mum will automatically be a sole custodian... Non-married Dads have to declare paternity...

In married parents' case it's purely a question of choice: parents choose not only the given names but the which surname the child will have. As to how common it is to have Mum's surname: probably not very common but then not at all unheard of... I presume Mum's surname is chosen if it's fairly rare, for example, and parents wish the surname to live on. Other reasons may well apply, too. Good luck with your choice...
Re: name
I don't know if anyone keeps any statistics on that, but I've known 4 kids who were born while parents were married and had their mother's last name. I'd say it's rare but not very rare.longtrav wrote:thanks hank.........ok then how common is it for a baby to get the mother name if parents are married in finland over the fathers name.
BTW, are you asking only about the families where the father keeps his own last name? Because in families where the husband takes the wife's name all the children always have the wife's name too.
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thanks
my name is LONG so that not that hard she said it was common i did't think so just checking. I know she did that just to help her with custody stuff. and I know already about finlands Bias to men. If woman are = tp men then men are = to woman why are childrena any diffrent to the courts.

Re: thanks
I don't think the child's last name will make any difference. Finland, like all the other western countries, tends to be biased against men in custody decisions, but the fact that the kid has her name is not likely to make it worse.longtrav wrote:my name is LONG so that not that hard she said it was common i did't think so just checking. I know she did that just to help her with custody stuff. and I know already about finlands Bias to men. If woman are = tp men then men are = to woman why are childrena any diffrent to the courts.
Vera
- strawberry
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- Location: Helsinki
Re: thanks
I'm sorry, longtrav, you're having to go through all that...Vera wrote:I don't think the child's last name will make any difference. Finland, like all the other western countries, tends to be biased against men in custody decisions, but the fact that the kid has her name is not likely to make it worse.longtrav wrote:my name is LONG so that not that hard she said it was common i did't think so just checking. I know she did that just to help her with custody stuff. and I know already about finlands Bias to men. If woman are = tp men then men are = to woman why are childrena any diffrent to the courts.
Vera


Anyway, it's undesputable the courts remain biased towards mothers in unclear cases, however, I believe men's status has improved to an extent and even the courts are very much in favour of joint custody. So, unless you're a convicted criminal

I do wish you luck - all the best.
Re: baby names
They are talking about the last name (family name, surname), not the first name(s).