How do decision-makers in the judiciary approach children’s capacities as set out in Article 5 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child? Children in public care who cannot be reunified with their birth parents may be adopted, but are children given agency in these cases that are highly important to the involved children? We examine all judgments on adoptions from care made in Norway in a six-year period (2011-2016) involving children aged 4-17 years old, a total of 169 judgments. These cases are decided after a two- to three-day hearing in the court-like County Board. The results of our analysis are discouraging because many children are absent in the decision-maker’s justification and conclusion about adoption. Young children do not ha...
For decades, the discussion on children's competence to consent to medical issues has concentrated a...
This chapter examines whether including children’s participatory rights in the Norwegian Constitutio...
Unlike adults, children are not granted the assumption of having decision-making capacity because th...
How do decision-makers in the judiciary approach children’s capacities as set out in Article 5 of th...
By utilising theories of deliberation and rational argumentation, this article critically analyses t...
This thesis asks how decision-makers with extensive discretionary authority justify strong state int...
Children’s participation in decisions about their lives is a crucial point of the UN Convention on t...
This article seeks to reconceptualise approaches to assessing children’s capacity, particularly in l...
This article studies how three groups of professional decision-makers – child welfare workers, exper...
This legal study concerns the child’s right and possibility to participate when a care order is bein...
The adoption in 1989 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) has seen a quantum leap in t...
The adoption in 1989 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) has seen a quantum leap in t...
Article 12 of the un Convention on the Rights of the Child (crc) stipulates that children should hav...
This paper considers the issue of ‘practicability’ in ascertaining the views of children in family p...
Unlike adults, children are not granted the assumption of having decision-making capacity because th...
For decades, the discussion on children's competence to consent to medical issues has concentrated a...
This chapter examines whether including children’s participatory rights in the Norwegian Constitutio...
Unlike adults, children are not granted the assumption of having decision-making capacity because th...
How do decision-makers in the judiciary approach children’s capacities as set out in Article 5 of th...
By utilising theories of deliberation and rational argumentation, this article critically analyses t...
This thesis asks how decision-makers with extensive discretionary authority justify strong state int...
Children’s participation in decisions about their lives is a crucial point of the UN Convention on t...
This article seeks to reconceptualise approaches to assessing children’s capacity, particularly in l...
This article studies how three groups of professional decision-makers – child welfare workers, exper...
This legal study concerns the child’s right and possibility to participate when a care order is bein...
The adoption in 1989 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) has seen a quantum leap in t...
The adoption in 1989 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) has seen a quantum leap in t...
Article 12 of the un Convention on the Rights of the Child (crc) stipulates that children should hav...
This paper considers the issue of ‘practicability’ in ascertaining the views of children in family p...
Unlike adults, children are not granted the assumption of having decision-making capacity because th...
For decades, the discussion on children's competence to consent to medical issues has concentrated a...
This chapter examines whether including children’s participatory rights in the Norwegian Constitutio...
Unlike adults, children are not granted the assumption of having decision-making capacity because th...