No-fault divorce was a response to changes already taking place in the family system.
Between 1969 and 1985 all the states provided for no-fault divorce.
But few people who have lived through a no-fault divorce, especially those with children, would say they took the step lightly.
It would be a bad idea to place limitations on no-fault divorce.
Often, it is used as justification for a no-fault divorce.
For example, Pennsylvania did not introduce no-fault divorce until around 1980.
Even if there were some misconduct, it doesn't matter in a no-fault divorce.
A no-fault divorce, no hard feelings, at least not in any official records or interviews.
The chief change in our now liberated society was the adoption of easy, no-fault divorce.
In a no-fault divorce, even when it's a little bit contested, the judges want to see each party go on and have a life.