The Responsibility of Parents in Electronic Contracts Made by Minors

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Název: The Responsibility of Parents in Electronic Contracts Made by Minors
Autoři: Dewi Astutty Mochtar, Dewi Ayu Rahayu
Zdroj: Jurnal Cakrawala Hukum, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2024)
Informace o vydavateli: Universitas Merdeka Malang, 2024.
Rok vydání: 2024
Témata: electronic contracts, parental reponsibility, Law, minors
Popis: The quick progression of innovation and the expanding utilization of electronic stages have driven a rise in minors' interest in online exchanges. This marvel poses legitimate challenges, particularly concerning the legitimacy of electronic contracts made by minors and the degree of parental obligation. This paper looks at the legitimate system overseeing electronic contracts, including those of minors, and centres on the risk of guardians in such exchanges. Employing a regulating legitimate investigative strategy and a statute approach, the consider analyzes pertinent laws, counting gracious law and electronic exchange controls, to decide the legitimate standing of contracts made by minors. The paper also investigates the part of guardians in administering their children's computerized exercises and their legitimate commitments when their children enter into official electronic understandings. The discoveries demonstrate that whereas minors, for the most part, need the lawful capacity to enter into contracts, parents' lawful obligations change depending on each case's particular circumstances. This paper emphasizes the need for clearer, legitimate arrangements and more grounded parental supervision to ensure that minors are within the advanced age range.
Druh dokumentu: Article
ISSN: 2598-6538
2356-4962
DOI: 10.26905/idjch.v15i1.14204
Přístupová URL adresa: https://doaj.org/article/e6e6a5eefccd43bbbbaf33d41b244fc2
Rights: CC BY SA
Přístupové číslo: edsair.doi.dedup.....ad0fc828a994e990197c897931a97a6a
Databáze: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:The quick progression of innovation and the expanding utilization of electronic stages have driven a rise in minors' interest in online exchanges. This marvel poses legitimate challenges, particularly concerning the legitimacy of electronic contracts made by minors and the degree of parental obligation. This paper looks at the legitimate system overseeing electronic contracts, including those of minors, and centres on the risk of guardians in such exchanges. Employing a regulating legitimate investigative strategy and a statute approach, the consider analyzes pertinent laws, counting gracious law and electronic exchange controls, to decide the legitimate standing of contracts made by minors. The paper also investigates the part of guardians in administering their children's computerized exercises and their legitimate commitments when their children enter into official electronic understandings. The discoveries demonstrate that whereas minors, for the most part, need the lawful capacity to enter into contracts, parents' lawful obligations change depending on each case's particular circumstances. This paper emphasizes the need for clearer, legitimate arrangements and more grounded parental supervision to ensure that minors are within the advanced age range.
ISSN:25986538
23564962
DOI:10.26905/idjch.v15i1.14204