In the debate on child participation in family law proceedings, a pertinent question is whether or not to provide children with representation and if so, how to provide it. Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (uncrc) provides minimum standards for the child’s right to express views and to do so, in judicial proceedings, through a representative. This article takes these minimum standards as a yardstick to evaluate the legal frameworks of child representation in the family law proceedings of four jurisdictions: Australia (New South Wales), France, the Netherlands and South Africa. On the basis of a systematic legal comparison and evaluation, this article presents a “compliance report card” and concludes wit...
LLM (Comparative Child Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusIt is evident from the legis...
Laws and policies in different jurisdictions provide a range of mechanisms that allow children invol...
The Australian family courts introduced Child Inclusive Conferencing after the country adopted the U...
In the debate on child participation in family law proceedings, a pertinent question is whether or n...
The family law systems of Commonwealth countries, like New Zealand and Australia, were traditionally...
Many children in Europe are confronted with family law disputes in which their future is at stake, s...
This article reports on the findings of a 2009 survey conducted under the auspices of the Childwatch...
This article examines the principle of child participation in a legal context, focusing first on the...
This paper provides a comparison of a number of alternative models of international practice in rela...
Children are commonly recognized as separate human beings with individual views and wishes worthy of...
How children are heard in family law proceedings that affect them exploring the representations and ...
The rights of children in youth justice and civil court proceedings, and in particular the right of ...
This thesis focuses on children’s participation rights in the context of private law disputes in the...
Over the last few decades, there has been increasing interest in the extent to which children should...
Section 28(1)(h) of the Constitution of South Africa is a unique right that permits children to be r...
LLM (Comparative Child Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusIt is evident from the legis...
Laws and policies in different jurisdictions provide a range of mechanisms that allow children invol...
The Australian family courts introduced Child Inclusive Conferencing after the country adopted the U...
In the debate on child participation in family law proceedings, a pertinent question is whether or n...
The family law systems of Commonwealth countries, like New Zealand and Australia, were traditionally...
Many children in Europe are confronted with family law disputes in which their future is at stake, s...
This article reports on the findings of a 2009 survey conducted under the auspices of the Childwatch...
This article examines the principle of child participation in a legal context, focusing first on the...
This paper provides a comparison of a number of alternative models of international practice in rela...
Children are commonly recognized as separate human beings with individual views and wishes worthy of...
How children are heard in family law proceedings that affect them exploring the representations and ...
The rights of children in youth justice and civil court proceedings, and in particular the right of ...
This thesis focuses on children’s participation rights in the context of private law disputes in the...
Over the last few decades, there has been increasing interest in the extent to which children should...
Section 28(1)(h) of the Constitution of South Africa is a unique right that permits children to be r...
LLM (Comparative Child Law), North-West University, Potchefstroom CampusIt is evident from the legis...
Laws and policies in different jurisdictions provide a range of mechanisms that allow children invol...
The Australian family courts introduced Child Inclusive Conferencing after the country adopted the U...