information on court delays The length of care proceedings in England has been growing steadily longer since the implementation of the Children Act 1989, even though reducing delay was one of the Act’s specific objectives. Figures from eight areas show that, for cases ending in 2000, the average duration ranged from over eight months to a year, depending on area. A significant number of children are waiting much longer. More than ten per cent of cases in a sample from one local authority had been waiting more than two years for a court decision. Chris Beckett presents the evidence and discusses the reasons as well as some possible ways forward
This publication is available for download at http://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/research-and-an...
Child protection in Court: Outcomes for Children reports the findings of the ESRC-funded Outcomes of...
This article is one chapter of a new book Delay in the Court described in the footnote. The two prec...
The 1989 Children Act in England and Wales and the derivative 1995 Children (NI) Order in Northern I...
This article is the first to report on a study that tracked all the care proceedings initiated by an...
For many years policy-makers and practitioners have wrestled with the problem of lengthy court proce...
The Children and Families Act 2014 has introduced a 26-week timeline for Children Act 1989 care and ...
Context: Long-standing concerns about unnecessary delay in care proceedings led to major reforms in ...
Delays in the court process are a key obstacle in accessing justice. Delay creates costs; not only i...
The Children and Families Act 2014 has introduced a 26-week timeline for Children Act 1989 care and ...
The issue of delay in public law children cases is a concern because of the uncertainty it creates f...
Among the most important changes that it was hoped would flow from the 1989 Children Act were, first...
The quality of the administration of justice by courts is being discussed in many countries. The len...
Recently, the Cleveland Bar Association created a committee of lawyers and laymen to study the probl...
• The Tri-borough pilot has been successful in achieving its key aim of reducing the length of care ...
This publication is available for download at http://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/research-and-an...
Child protection in Court: Outcomes for Children reports the findings of the ESRC-funded Outcomes of...
This article is one chapter of a new book Delay in the Court described in the footnote. The two prec...
The 1989 Children Act in England and Wales and the derivative 1995 Children (NI) Order in Northern I...
This article is the first to report on a study that tracked all the care proceedings initiated by an...
For many years policy-makers and practitioners have wrestled with the problem of lengthy court proce...
The Children and Families Act 2014 has introduced a 26-week timeline for Children Act 1989 care and ...
Context: Long-standing concerns about unnecessary delay in care proceedings led to major reforms in ...
Delays in the court process are a key obstacle in accessing justice. Delay creates costs; not only i...
The Children and Families Act 2014 has introduced a 26-week timeline for Children Act 1989 care and ...
The issue of delay in public law children cases is a concern because of the uncertainty it creates f...
Among the most important changes that it was hoped would flow from the 1989 Children Act were, first...
The quality of the administration of justice by courts is being discussed in many countries. The len...
Recently, the Cleveland Bar Association created a committee of lawyers and laymen to study the probl...
• The Tri-borough pilot has been successful in achieving its key aim of reducing the length of care ...
This publication is available for download at http://www.justice.gov.uk/publications/research-and-an...
Child protection in Court: Outcomes for Children reports the findings of the ESRC-funded Outcomes of...
This article is one chapter of a new book Delay in the Court described in the footnote. The two prec...