Supervised access has become a key component of Canadian custody and access decision making in recent years, in large part due to a shift in attitudes towards post-separation contact between non-custodial parents, typically fathers, and their children. While the sole criterion upon which an access decision can be made is the “best interests of the child,” the increased emphasis on ensuring that children have “maximum contact” with each of their parents post-separation, and the particular focus on maintaining paternal contact, has meant that orders for “no access” have almost disappeared. In an effort to unpack the themes underlying supervised access decision making in Canada, this article analyzes two years of family law judgments from Brit...
The following analysis provides a bird's eye view of the economic impact of custody and access dispo...
Under BC’s Family Law Act (FLA), the best interests of the child are now the only consideration when...
The objectives of this study were to consider the causes of disputes, particularly access disputes, ...
Supervised access has become a key component of Canadian custody and access decision making in recen...
This article compares the law of custody and access disputes with the procedure used to resolve them...
This is the published version of an article published by Thomson Reuters in Canadian Family Law Quar...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
This paper explores how and whether the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is being interprete...
In March 1993, the Department of Justice, Canada, published and circulated a public discussion paper...
This article describes Quebec’s filiation regime and explains some of the Roy Report’s recommendatio...
Most jurisdictions in Canada and the United States have, to a greater or lesser extent, endorsed the...
Contemporary debates regarding the appropriate way to resolve custody and access disputes reflect de...
This paper examines the treatment of joint custody in the British Columbia Court of Appeal from 1996...
This article reviews the jurisprudence that emerged during the first year of the new family law stat...
This is the published version of an article published by Thomson Reuters in Canadian Family Law Quar...
The following analysis provides a bird's eye view of the economic impact of custody and access dispo...
Under BC’s Family Law Act (FLA), the best interests of the child are now the only consideration when...
The objectives of this study were to consider the causes of disputes, particularly access disputes, ...
Supervised access has become a key component of Canadian custody and access decision making in recen...
This article compares the law of custody and access disputes with the procedure used to resolve them...
This is the published version of an article published by Thomson Reuters in Canadian Family Law Quar...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
This paper explores how and whether the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is being interprete...
In March 1993, the Department of Justice, Canada, published and circulated a public discussion paper...
This article describes Quebec’s filiation regime and explains some of the Roy Report’s recommendatio...
Most jurisdictions in Canada and the United States have, to a greater or lesser extent, endorsed the...
Contemporary debates regarding the appropriate way to resolve custody and access disputes reflect de...
This paper examines the treatment of joint custody in the British Columbia Court of Appeal from 1996...
This article reviews the jurisprudence that emerged during the first year of the new family law stat...
This is the published version of an article published by Thomson Reuters in Canadian Family Law Quar...
The following analysis provides a bird's eye view of the economic impact of custody and access dispo...
Under BC’s Family Law Act (FLA), the best interests of the child are now the only consideration when...
The objectives of this study were to consider the causes of disputes, particularly access disputes, ...