The essays in Volume 1 focus on the substantive law relating to the child-parent relationship in terms of custody and access and on procedural frameworks adopted around the world to resolve disputes arising between parents in relation to their children. The first group of essays offers a comparative analysis of the paradigm shift occurring in post-divorce child law away from notions of custody, care and control to that based on “parental responsibility” in diverse jurisdictions such as England, Hong Kong, New Zealand, China and Europe. In the second section, essays focus on the procedural framework within which disputes relating to parenting and care of children post-divorce may be resolved, with particular focus on the development of speci...
The continued involvement of parents in the rearing of their children post-divorce or -family separa...
This book includes chapters from a range of countries which critically reflect on recent development...
The Children Act 1989 recognized for the first time, in statutory form, that children can apply, wit...
The essays in Volume 2 provide insights on the serious problems of child abuse and child sex traffic...
This article reports on the findings of a 2009 survey conducted under the auspices of the Childwatch...
Chapter 11Discussing various innovations including the recent publication by the HKSAR Judiciary of ...
This study explored family members' experience of, and satisfaction with, New Zealand Family Court d...
Parental responsibility in Australia is situated within the complex statutory framework that governs...
In child custodial disputes, the tremendous shift from parental rights to parental responsibilities ...
Decision-making authority in respect of a child in an intact family is allocated using the concepts ...
This collection brings together analyses of disputes between parents and doctors over the treatment ...
Over the past two decades, there has been a paradigm shift in the way the legal system handles most ...
The family law systems of Commonwealth countries, like New Zealand and Australia, were traditionally...
This thesis examines the emerging area of alternative dispute resolution in a family law context in ...
The right of children to express their views in all matters affecting their lives is regarded as one...
The continued involvement of parents in the rearing of their children post-divorce or -family separa...
This book includes chapters from a range of countries which critically reflect on recent development...
The Children Act 1989 recognized for the first time, in statutory form, that children can apply, wit...
The essays in Volume 2 provide insights on the serious problems of child abuse and child sex traffic...
This article reports on the findings of a 2009 survey conducted under the auspices of the Childwatch...
Chapter 11Discussing various innovations including the recent publication by the HKSAR Judiciary of ...
This study explored family members' experience of, and satisfaction with, New Zealand Family Court d...
Parental responsibility in Australia is situated within the complex statutory framework that governs...
In child custodial disputes, the tremendous shift from parental rights to parental responsibilities ...
Decision-making authority in respect of a child in an intact family is allocated using the concepts ...
This collection brings together analyses of disputes between parents and doctors over the treatment ...
Over the past two decades, there has been a paradigm shift in the way the legal system handles most ...
The family law systems of Commonwealth countries, like New Zealand and Australia, were traditionally...
This thesis examines the emerging area of alternative dispute resolution in a family law context in ...
The right of children to express their views in all matters affecting their lives is regarded as one...
The continued involvement of parents in the rearing of their children post-divorce or -family separa...
This book includes chapters from a range of countries which critically reflect on recent development...
The Children Act 1989 recognized for the first time, in statutory form, that children can apply, wit...