Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Is it legal for a man to be the head of the household and a woman to sign the account of her parents and brothers? Can the man refuse?

Is it legal for a man to be the head of the household and a woman to sign the account of her parents and brothers? Can the man refuse?

Is it legal for the man to be the head of the household and the woman to move to her parents' brother's account? Can the man refuse?

Of course you can refuse, but who can tell about housework?

The law has no clear restrictions on the refuge between parents, children and other immediate family members, but the refuge between non-immediate family members needs to meet certain conditions.

Adult children take care of their parents, and an adult child, his spouse and minor children are allowed to enter the home under the condition that their parents have their own property houses (including houses where the property right unit has issued a certificate agreeing to allocate or arrange residence) and have no children around them and live together.

The basic conditions for settling down are a legally fixed residence, a stable occupation or a stable source of livelihood.

In addition, if parents take refuge in their children, the children must be at least 18 years old;

If the children take refuge in their parents, they are underage and unmarried, and have no formal job. Those who take refuge in the on-the-job cadres and workers' departments will be transferred to hukou according to the nature of their work.

(1) There is no age limit for immediate family members to take refuge with their parents. Hukou can rely on relatives and non-relatives. The household registration policy does not prohibit people who are not relatives from taking refuge in the location of the household registration. As long as the local policy allows, the other party agrees to accept it.

(2) The general procedures for relatives of registered permanent residence to take refuge (not to say that they must be immediate family members) are slightly different from place to place. Please consult the police station where the registered permanent residence moves in.