While the concepts of recognition and relationality are sometimes articulated as competing perspectives, this article argues both are important to meeting the needs of families and children from minority cultural and faith backgrounds in Australian family dispute resolution. It considers why and how recognition and relationality might be integrated into family dispute resolution processes to optimise the participation by, and self determination of, minority parents in making care arrangements for their children following separation through the process of family dispute resolution. This discussion is important because it locates arguments about how to develop culturally responsive family mediation practice within broader political and philos...
The Bangladeshi Muslim community has a very short history of migration and settlement in Australia, ...
In this article, we draw on data from an in-depth study of thirty-five parent couples from different...
Family relationship services span a diverse and extensive range of interventions that aim to support...
Editorial. This special edition of the Australian Journal of Family Law publishes some of the papers...
The development of the field of family dispute resolution (FDR) in Australia since 2008 has invited ...
This article examines aspects of post-separation services and service provision and summarises the l...
All services offered by the Family Support Program (FSP)—managed by the Australian Government Depart...
The cultural appropriateness of human service processes is a major factor in determining the effecti...
The cultural appropriateness of human service processes is a major factor in determining the effecti...
In 2008 CatholicCare Sydney and Anglicare Sydney commissioned Dr Susan Armstrong of the University o...
This article considers the contemporary nature of family dispute resolution in parenting matters in ...
Under the Australian family law framework mandating mediation since 2006, the role of the family law...
The growth of child-inclusive family law dispute resolution in Australia represents a response to em...
The 2006 Australian family law reforms preserve the ‘best interests of the child’ as the guiding pri...
Research into the unique needs and interests of children in the light of parental separation has pro...
The Bangladeshi Muslim community has a very short history of migration and settlement in Australia, ...
In this article, we draw on data from an in-depth study of thirty-five parent couples from different...
Family relationship services span a diverse and extensive range of interventions that aim to support...
Editorial. This special edition of the Australian Journal of Family Law publishes some of the papers...
The development of the field of family dispute resolution (FDR) in Australia since 2008 has invited ...
This article examines aspects of post-separation services and service provision and summarises the l...
All services offered by the Family Support Program (FSP)—managed by the Australian Government Depart...
The cultural appropriateness of human service processes is a major factor in determining the effecti...
The cultural appropriateness of human service processes is a major factor in determining the effecti...
In 2008 CatholicCare Sydney and Anglicare Sydney commissioned Dr Susan Armstrong of the University o...
This article considers the contemporary nature of family dispute resolution in parenting matters in ...
Under the Australian family law framework mandating mediation since 2006, the role of the family law...
The growth of child-inclusive family law dispute resolution in Australia represents a response to em...
The 2006 Australian family law reforms preserve the ‘best interests of the child’ as the guiding pri...
Research into the unique needs and interests of children in the light of parental separation has pro...
The Bangladeshi Muslim community has a very short history of migration and settlement in Australia, ...
In this article, we draw on data from an in-depth study of thirty-five parent couples from different...
Family relationship services span a diverse and extensive range of interventions that aim to support...