Copyright © SAGE PublicationsOpen Access articlePublished online before print July 13, 2015, doi: 10.1177/1461445615590722We used Discursive Psychology to study the claims and arguments which occur when “the child’s best interests” is produced as a resource in family mediation settings. Analysis draws on data from three pairs of separated or separating parents attempting to resolve child contact or residency disputes through mediation. Our analysis focuses on the tendency of claims to the abstract notion of the child’s best interests to exacerbate conflict, especially as parents drew on conflicting research in this area. Changing expectations of fathering could be observed in the men’s argumentative positioning, and this was taken up in dif...
Section II of this article describes the historical framework from which child custody mediation has...
Parental conflict profoundly affects many children globally and in South Africa. In recent times, bo...
This article presents the findings of a small qualitative study of child-inclusive mediation concern...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
We used Discourse Analysis to study how mediators and parties negotiate competing priorities and val...
Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. While making ...
Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. While making ...
CC BY 4.0Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. Whi...
The purpose of this study was to survey family mediators' perceptions of clients' reasons for post-...
This is a revised and updated article, Kearney (2011), which considers research findings indicating ...
This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/I031812/1)
While alternative dispute resolution has become widely accepted in recent years, several types of le...
A significant proportion of parents in mediation present destructive and escalating conflicts. In a ...
What is the best interests of the child in family mediation and is mediation in the best interests o...
This essay, written for a Symposium celebrating the child custody scholarship of Professor Robert Mn...
Section II of this article describes the historical framework from which child custody mediation has...
Parental conflict profoundly affects many children globally and in South Africa. In recent times, bo...
This article presents the findings of a small qualitative study of child-inclusive mediation concern...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
We used Discourse Analysis to study how mediators and parties negotiate competing priorities and val...
Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. While making ...
Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. While making ...
CC BY 4.0Divorce causes structural family changes, which require specific decisions to be made. Whi...
The purpose of this study was to survey family mediators' perceptions of clients' reasons for post-...
This is a revised and updated article, Kearney (2011), which considers research findings indicating ...
This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (grant number ES/I031812/1)
While alternative dispute resolution has become widely accepted in recent years, several types of le...
A significant proportion of parents in mediation present destructive and escalating conflicts. In a ...
What is the best interests of the child in family mediation and is mediation in the best interests o...
This essay, written for a Symposium celebrating the child custody scholarship of Professor Robert Mn...
Section II of this article describes the historical framework from which child custody mediation has...
Parental conflict profoundly affects many children globally and in South Africa. In recent times, bo...
This article presents the findings of a small qualitative study of child-inclusive mediation concern...