This paper assesses the current state of English criminal law in relation to the use of physical force by parents as a means of disciplining their children. It does so in the light of the Children Act 2004, the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms 1950, Art 3, pressure from bodies such as the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child and the law in other parts of Europe. It acknowledges that parents should have a large degree of autonomy in relation to parenting. However, the defence of `discipline¿ or `reasonable chastisement' is outdated, vague and potentially dangerous to children. It is argued that the response of the British Government to criticism of our law has been far from satisf...
The parental right to use physical force to discipline and restrain children is a privilege firmly r...
¨ Almost all parents in Britain with children aged up to twelve years old use non-physical methods o...
Objective: Across all of Australia's states and territories, it is legal for a parent or carer to hi...
The laws against cruelty to children in England and Wales endorse the common law defence of ‘reasona...
In England and Wales, it has been held in the common-law that teachers are \u27in loco parentis\u27 ...
Abstract Physical punishment remains a common practice in the USA despite significant empirical evid...
In England and Wales, it has been held in the common-law that teachers are 'in loco parentis' and mu...
Although the physical punishment of children is overall an ineffective disciplining strategy, has ad...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article will review the law in the area, analysing the impact of European and International jur...
An independent report by Sir Roger Singleton, Chief Adviser on the Safety of Children (March 2010)
This chapter examines the relationship between law and social norms, and behaviours, specifically pa...
The paper presents two faces of the problem of corporal punishment. One is a global tendency or even...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article reflects on the boundary between acceptable and unacceptable violence through an examin...
The parental right to use physical force to discipline and restrain children is a privilege firmly r...
¨ Almost all parents in Britain with children aged up to twelve years old use non-physical methods o...
Objective: Across all of Australia's states and territories, it is legal for a parent or carer to hi...
The laws against cruelty to children in England and Wales endorse the common law defence of ‘reasona...
In England and Wales, it has been held in the common-law that teachers are \u27in loco parentis\u27 ...
Abstract Physical punishment remains a common practice in the USA despite significant empirical evid...
In England and Wales, it has been held in the common-law that teachers are 'in loco parentis' and mu...
Although the physical punishment of children is overall an ineffective disciplining strategy, has ad...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article will review the law in the area, analysing the impact of European and International jur...
An independent report by Sir Roger Singleton, Chief Adviser on the Safety of Children (March 2010)
This chapter examines the relationship between law and social norms, and behaviours, specifically pa...
The paper presents two faces of the problem of corporal punishment. One is a global tendency or even...
As at March 2016, 49 states had reformed their laws to clearly prohibit all corporal punishment of c...
This article reflects on the boundary between acceptable and unacceptable violence through an examin...
The parental right to use physical force to discipline and restrain children is a privilege firmly r...
¨ Almost all parents in Britain with children aged up to twelve years old use non-physical methods o...
Objective: Across all of Australia's states and territories, it is legal for a parent or carer to hi...