Children’s Voices, Family Disputes and Child-Inclusive Mediation


Book Description

ePDF and ePUB available open access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. Recent legislative changes in England and Wales have eroded children’s ability to exercise their article 12 UNCRC rights to information, consultation and representation when parents separate. However, children’s voices may be heard through child-inclusive mediation (CIM). Considered from a children’s rights perspective, this book provides a critical socio-legal account of CIM practice. It draws on in-depth interviews with relationship professionals, mediators, parents and children, to consider the experiences, risks and benefits of CIM. It investigates obstacles to greater uptake of CIM and its role in improving children’s wellbeing and agency. Exploring the culture and practice changes necessary for a more routine application of CIM, the book demonstrates how reconceptualising CIM through a children’s rights framework could help to address barriers and improve outcomes for children.




The Voice of a Child in Family Law Disputes


Book Description

When relationships break down, disputes commonly arise over the parenting arrangements for children, whose living arrangements have to be reorganized at a time of great conflict and turmoil. Most such disputes are resolved without a judicial determination through private agreement, negotiation between lawyers, mediation, or a combination of these methods. This book examines whether and how children should be involved in the process of resolving family law disputes. Although there is widespread acceptance in the Western world that the views of children should be taken into account, and that the weight given to those views should depend on their age and maturity, there is much less agreement about how children's voices should be heard. There are many benefits to giving children a voice in decisions that affect their lives, and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child identifies this as a right for children. However, there are difficulties and dangers in seeking to hear from children, not least because they may be subject to pressure from each parent to express views that support his or her case. Courts dealing with family law issues are constantly faced with a dilemma. Is it better to keep children out of the conflict, or to give them a say, so that the arrangements are as workable for them as possible? This book integrates examinations of these issues with empirical data from interviews which explore the views and experiences of children, parents, counsellors, mediators, lawyers, and judges involved in such disputes in Australia. Drawing on this research, the authors suggest ways in which children can better be heard without placing them at the centre of their parents' conflicts. They argue that the focus should not just be on how children are heard in legal proceedings, but on how they can be better heard in those families who resolve their conflicts without going to court.




Hello, I'm a Voice, Let Me Talk


Book Description




Family Dispute Resolution


Book Description

Over the last 50 years family justice systems in the United States and elsewhere have evolved from a predominant adversarial approach focused on litigation to the significant integration of more collaborative, settlement-oriented approaches, especially mediation. In Family Dispute Resolution: Process and Practice some of the field's leading practitioners, researchers, teachers, and policymakers provide an overview of the modern family dispute resolution processes designed to help separating and divorcing parents make decisions about the future of their families. Chapters in this book address the growth of divorce mediation and other specialized processes including parenting coordination, arbitration, child-inclusive mediation, and online dispute resolution. They describe how to work with families experiencing issues including domestic violence, high conflict, substance misuse, and the lack of legal representation. Case management initiatives and special issues, including social science research and conflicting standards of practice, are also explored. Family Dispute Resolution provides a wide-ranging look at contemporary family dispute resolution processes and is essential reading for everyone interested in learning more about working with separating and divorcing families, including professionals, and law and graduate students.




The Voice of a Child in Family Law Disputes


Book Description

Is it better to keep children out of family law conflicts about parenting, or to give them a say? This book integrates the issues with empirical data on the views and experiences of children and other participants in such disputes, suggesting ways that children can better be heard without placing them at the centre of conflicts.







Nordic Mediation Research


Book Description

This open access book presents twelve unique studies on mediation from researchers in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, respectively. Each study highlights important aspects of mediation, including the role of children in family mediation, the evolution and ambivalent application of restorative justice in the Nordic countries, the confusion of roles in court-connected mediation, and the challenges in dispute systems. Over the past 20-30 years, mediation has gained in popularity in many countries around the world and is often heralded as a suitable and cost-effective mode of conflict resolution. However, as the studies in this volumes show, mediation also has a number of potential drawbacks. Parties’ self-determination may be jeopardized, affected third parties are involved in an inadequate way, and the legal regulations may be flawed. The publication can inspire research, help professionals and policymakers in the field and be used as a textbook.




Therapeutic Family Mediation


Book Description

Designed as a practical hands-on manual or text for students and professors of social work, Therapeutic Family Mediation will also prove highly useful to mental health practitioners, legal professionals and mediators, couples going through divorce, and community workers specializing in family services.Key Features:Guides the reader through the authors' five-step model: Intake/Assessment, Pre-Mediation, Negotiation, Termination, and Follow-UpOutlines the use of parenting plans and financial plansExplores patterns of conflict and monetary issuesExplains the process of drafting contractsProvides the tools necessary for assisting high-conflict couples and culturally diverse couples




Conflict Resolution, Children and the Courts


Book Description

Workshop 2 - Power imbalance in child protection mediation: Challenges and opportunities 11 Workshop 3 - Training guardians ad litem 17 Workshop 5 - Representing the unreasonable client 31 Workshop 6 - Child focused mediation: Are we really putting children first? 45 Workshop 7 - Building a model Family Court 51 Workshop 8 - Restoring relationships between alienated children and their parents 81 Workshop 9 - Representing children in high conflict families: An interdisciplinary perspective 91 Workshop 10 - Mediating stepfamily issues 107 Workshop 11 - Judicial dispute resolution: Is it mediation? 115 Workshop 13 - Assessing sexual and physical abuse 129 Workshop 14 - Writing for the Family Court Review 143 Workshop 16 - Empirical advances in child custody evaluations 155 Workshop 18 - Early intervention using an interdisplinary special masters team 165 Workshop 19 - The impact of romantic relationships in post-divorce families 171 Workshop 22 - Screening for domestic abuse and other impairments to mediation 183 Workshop 23 - Parental acces and visitation programs: A national perspective 199 Workshop 24 - The impact of religious issues in custody disputes 205 Workshop 25 - On-the-spot mediation in family court 217 Workshop 26 - Mediation and the best interests of the child: Waving the kid flag 243 Workshop 28 - The child's voice in relocation disputes 253 Workshop 30 - Evaluating psychological and chemical dependency reports 263 Workshop 32 - Resolving kinship disputes: New applications for family group conferencing 267 Workshop 33 - Working with children: Techniques and tips for effective interviewing 283 Workshop 34 - Negotiation and communication skills for lawyers 291 Workshop 35 - How to's in family law cases involving domestic violence 309 Workshop 36 - Supervised visitation: Facilities and therapeutic models 327 Workshop 37 - Family ties and knots: Working with high conflict families 357 Workshop 38 - Cooperative lawyering and collaborative law 373.