This article compares the law of custody and access disputes with the procedure used to resolve them. The author argues that there is a fundamental contradiction between the two. The former focuses on the interests of the children involved to the exclusion of everything else. The latter, however, is controlled by and designed to protect the rights and interests of the adult parties to the dispute. Despite their doctrinal centrality in custody and access law, children are usually silent and invisible in custody and access procedure. To resolve this contradiction, the author proposes a focus on the costs and benefits of litigation between parents for the children involved. As it stands, too much of the litigation that occurs between parents h...
The most famous article on child-custody law, and one of the most important in family law scholarshi...
This article explores the significance of parental status in the determination of custody and the qu...
The principle 'best interests of the child' has been expanded by the legal community in recent years...
This article compares the law of custody and access disputes with the procedure used to resolve them...
Supervised access has become a key component of Canadian custody and access decision making in recen...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
The CRC is an ethical foundation documents to strengthen children's position in the family law proce...
This paper explores how and whether the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is being interprete...
The best interests of the child is the standard for awarding child custody in the United States, a...
This article will examine how a judge\u27s ethical framework can influence the outcome of a custody ...
Fifty years ago, the United States Supreme Court in In re Gault held that children have the constitu...
A few states, mostly in the West and South, still retain a preference in custody disputes for placin...
Children have legal rights. Yet, children typically lack the legal capacity to represent their inter...
Under BC’s Family Law Act (FLA), the best interests of the child are now the only consideration when...
In March 1993, the Department of Justice, Canada, published and circulated a public discussion paper...
The most famous article on child-custody law, and one of the most important in family law scholarshi...
This article explores the significance of parental status in the determination of custody and the qu...
The principle 'best interests of the child' has been expanded by the legal community in recent years...
This article compares the law of custody and access disputes with the procedure used to resolve them...
Supervised access has become a key component of Canadian custody and access decision making in recen...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
The CRC is an ethical foundation documents to strengthen children's position in the family law proce...
This paper explores how and whether the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child is being interprete...
The best interests of the child is the standard for awarding child custody in the United States, a...
This article will examine how a judge\u27s ethical framework can influence the outcome of a custody ...
Fifty years ago, the United States Supreme Court in In re Gault held that children have the constitu...
A few states, mostly in the West and South, still retain a preference in custody disputes for placin...
Children have legal rights. Yet, children typically lack the legal capacity to represent their inter...
Under BC’s Family Law Act (FLA), the best interests of the child are now the only consideration when...
In March 1993, the Department of Justice, Canada, published and circulated a public discussion paper...
The most famous article on child-custody law, and one of the most important in family law scholarshi...
This article explores the significance of parental status in the determination of custody and the qu...
The principle 'best interests of the child' has been expanded by the legal community in recent years...