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The Voice of a Child in Family Law Disputes

Parkinson, Patrick; Cashmore, Judy
ISBN-10: 0199237794
ISBN-13: 9780199237791

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2 new from $107.46
When relationships break down, disputes commonly arise over the parenting arrangements for children, whose living arrangements have to be reorganized at a time of great conflict and turmoil. Most such disputes are resolved without a judicial determination through private agreement,negotiation between lawyers, mediation, or a combination of these methods.
This book examines whether and how children should be involved in the process of resolving family law disputes. Although there is widespread acceptance in the Western world that the views of children should be taken intoaccount, and that the weight given to those views should depend on children's age and maturity, there is much less agreement about how children's voices should be heard. There are many benefits to giving children a voice in decisions that affect their lives, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child identifies this as a right for children. However there are difficulties and dangers in seeking to hear from children, not least because they may be subject topressure from each parent to express views that support his or her case. Courts dealing with family law issues are constantly faced with a dilemma. Is it better to keep children out of the conflict, or to give them a say so that the arrangements are as workable for them as possible?This book integrates examinations of these issues with empirical data from interviews which explore the views and experiences of children, parents, counsellors, mediators, lawyers and judges involved in such disputes in Australia. Drawing on this research, the authors suggest ways that children canbetter be heard without placing them at the centre of their parents' conflicts. They argue that the focus should not just be on how children are heard in legal proceedings, but on how they can be better heard in those families who resolve their conflicts without going to court.Patrick Parkinson is Professor of Law at the University of Sydney, specializing in family law. He served from 2004-2007 as Chairperson of the Family Law Council, an advisory body to the Australian federal Attorney-General and is Editor of the Australian Journal of Family Law. Judy Cashmore isAssociate Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Sydney. She has a PhD in developmental psychology and considerable research experience in relation to children's involvement in family law proceedings and when there are child protection issues. She is currently a member of the JudicialCommission of New South Wales.
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Preface
The Debate About Children's Voices
The Protective Approach to Children
Views on the Capacities of Children
Children as Participants
Understanding children as social actors
Understanding children as citizens
The Pitfalls of Listening to Children
Children may be placed in the middle of their parents' conflicts
The risk of undue influence
Children may be given the decision-making authority that the parents need to exercise
Children's voices may provide an excuse for adults to avoid hard decisions
The risk that children's voices will be used to facilitate irresponsible adult decisions
Different Levels and Forms of Participation
The Purpose of this Book
The Research
The Importance of Multiple Perspectives
The importance of children's and parents' views
The importance of professionals' views judges, lawyers and welfare professionals
Research Method
The participants and the interviews
Practical and Ethical Issues in Research with Children
Consent for children's participation
Confidentiality and privacy of children's responses
Format of interviews with children
The Different Ways of Hearing the Voice of the Child
Legislative Principles for Participation
Child-inclusive Mediation
Family Reports
Child Representatives
Children as Parties to Proceedings
Judicial Interviewing
Evidence from Children
The Filtering of Children's Voices
Children's and Parents' Views of Children's Participation
Preconditions for Children's Participation
Children's Views
Children's reasons for wanting to have a say
Children's reasons for not wanting to have a say
Children's actual and perceived involvement
How much say did children want?
Having a say and the fairness of the arrangements
Parents' Views
Should children have a say?
Age, maturity and parental influence
Parents' views on the benefits of children having a say
Children's and Parents' Views Compared
Similarities and differences in children's and parents' views
Differences between those who had experienced contested proceedings and those who had not
Voice and Choice in Children's Participation
Professional Views of Children's Participation
The Importance of Professional Perspectives
Family Lawyers
Age, maturity and parental influence
Workability and children's happiness
Protection from participation
Children as decision-makers
Children's participation as about choices between adult positions
Changing the system
Mediators and Counsellors
Enlightenment
Empowerment
The involvement of children in mediation
Workability
Therapeutic benefits
Concerns about pressure and manipulation
Age, maturity and self-determination
The risks of involving children in the litigation process
Judges
Children's voices in the context of all the evidence
Evaluating children's wishes
Lawyers v Welfare Professionals on Children's Participation
Participation, Decision-making and Parental Influence
Children's Involvement in The Litigation Process
The Voice of the Child in Family Reports
Entering the child's world
Assessing the child's views
Family reports and children's secrets
Following up on outcomes
The Role of Child Representatives
Meeting with the child
Ascertaining the views of the child
Representing the child
Respecting confidentiality
Advising the child
Counsellors, Lawyers and the Interpretation of Children's Voices
Parents' Views
What did parents think of the family report process?
What did parents think of the children's lawyers?
Children's Views
What did children think of the family report process?
What did children think of their legal representative?
Filtering, Confidentiality and Feedback Mechanisms
Judicial Conversations With Children
The Views of the Children
Who would be the best person to talk with?
Specific questions on talking with judges in chambers
Children's reasons for wanting to talk with the judge
Children's reasons for not wanting to talk with the judge
Parents' Views
Parents' reasons for favouring judges talking with children
Parents' reasons for not favouring judges talking with children
The preferred process
Professionals in the Family Law System
Areas of agreement
Objections to judicial conversations with children
Judges' experiences of talking with children in parenting disputes
The benefits of talking with children in chambers
Truth, Justice and Due Process
Towards a More Responsive Legal System
The Consensus on Children's Participation
The Benefits and Risks of Children's Participation
Why listen to children?
The risks of listening to children
Paradoxes in views of children's participation
Improving Children's Participation
Distinguish between voice and choice
Redefine the significance of age and maturity
Explore children's perspectives, not their 'wishes'
Distinguish between different kinds of decisions on which children's views may be invited
Follow certain guidelines about judicial interviews
Consider children's views with the aid of social-science expertise
Move beyond the focus on hearing children in trials
Conclusion
References
Index
Patrick Parkinson is a Professor of Law at the University of Sydney and an internationally renowned expert on family law. He has played a major role in shaping family law in Australia. His proposal for the establishment of a national network of family relationship centers, made to the prime minister in 2004, became the centerpiece of the Australian government's family law reforms. He was also instrumental in reforming the child support system and has had extensive involvement in law reform issues concerning child protection. He was made a Member of the Order of Australia for his services to law, legal education, policy reform, and the community. Parkinson has published widely on family law and child protection, as well as other areas of law. His most recent books include Tradition and Change in Australian Law (4th edition, 2010) and Australian Family Law in Context (4th edition, 2009), among many others.
Patrick Parkinson is Professor of Law at the University of Sydney, specializing in family law. He served from 2004-2007 as Chairperson of the Family Law Council, an advisory body to the Australian federal Attorney-General and is Editor of the Australian Journal of Family Law. Judy Cashmore isAssociate Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Sydney. She has a PhD in developmental psychology and considerable research experience in relation to children's involvement in family law proceedings and when there are child protection issues. She is currently a member of the JudicialCommission of New South Wales.

List price: $99.00
Edition: 2009
Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Binding: Trade Cloth
Pages: 200
Size: 6.25" wide x 9.25" long x 1.00" tall
Weight: 1.19 lbs.
Language: English

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