In Australia, as elsewhere, not a great deal is known about the \u27nuts and bolts\u27 of parent-child contact after separation. This report, edited by Bruce Smyth, uses information gained from a series of focus groups and the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey to identify patterns of parenting after separation and factors that facilitate or impede contact, particularly contact between fathers and their children, and how these factors interact to influence different patterns and levels of care
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
While there is good information on the broad patterns of parenting after separation in Australia, wh...
Despite widespread interest in patterns of parenting after separation in Australia, the gaps in our ...
Recent reforms to the family law and Child Support Scheme systems in Australia emphasise the importa...
Drawing on data from Wave 1 of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey,...
High rates of parental separation and the extent to which non-resident fathers lose contact with the...
This article examines continuity and change in post-separation patterns of parenting across a three-...
In Australia, there has been considerable interest in recent years in the policy and practical impli...
The importance for children\u27s wellbeing, long-term adjustment and maintenance of loving and suppo...
In 2009, the Australian Attorney-General commissioned research into family law and family violence i...
This report presents findings from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS). It describes variations in con...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Background: The study explored the relationship between contact and child adjustment where parents a...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
While there is good information on the broad patterns of parenting after separation in Australia, wh...
Despite widespread interest in patterns of parenting after separation in Australia, the gaps in our ...
Recent reforms to the family law and Child Support Scheme systems in Australia emphasise the importa...
Drawing on data from Wave 1 of the Household Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey,...
High rates of parental separation and the extent to which non-resident fathers lose contact with the...
This article examines continuity and change in post-separation patterns of parenting across a three-...
In Australia, there has been considerable interest in recent years in the policy and practical impli...
The importance for children\u27s wellbeing, long-term adjustment and maintenance of loving and suppo...
In 2009, the Australian Attorney-General commissioned research into family law and family violence i...
This report presents findings from the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS). It describes variations in con...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Background: The study explored the relationship between contact and child adjustment where parents a...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...
Frequent parent–child contact after divorce is generally assumed to be in children's best interests,...