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Children and Their Families: Contact, Rights and Welfare [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 430 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x22 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Sep-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1841132535
  • ISBN-13: 9781841132532
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 430 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x22 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Sep-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Hart Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1841132535
  • ISBN-13: 9781841132532
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book is concerned with the regulation of family relationships,in particular the issue of openness and contact in the many different family situations in which it may arise. The shift towards a presumption of contact, and its articulation within diverse fields of family law and practice raises a whole series of questions which this book seeks to explore. For example: Why has the contact presumption emerged? What is meant by contact, and with whom. What is the value and purpose of it? What makes it work or not work? What is the role of law and other forms of external intervention in promoting, regulating or facilitating contact and to what extent should 'familial' relationships be subject to state regulation? More broadly, what can we infer about current conceptualisations of family, parenting (and the relative importance of social and biological parenthood) and childhood from policy and practice towards contact? These and other questions were explored in a series of seminars organised by the Cambridge Socio-Legal Group in 2002. The book is the product of these seminars. Andrew Bainham, Belinda Brooks-Gordon, Ann Buchanan, Shelley Day Sclater, Judy Dunn, John Eekelaar, Bob Geldof, Jonathan Herring, Claire Hughes, Joan Hunt, Adrian James, Julie Jessop, Felicity Kaganas, Bridget Lindley, Mavis Maclean, Joanna Miles, Katrin Mueller-Johnson, Elsbeth Neil, Jan Pryor, Martin Richards, Bob Simpson, Donna Smith, Liz Trinder

Recenzijas

...valuable insights on the law, government policy, and sociological research, as well as a topical consumer critique of the family law system. Helen Rhoades, The University of Melbourne International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family April 2005 ...essential reading for parents and professionals, as it explores the meaning and significance of parent-child relationships after family breakdown An informative and inspirational book for all who care about the well-being of this nation's children. David Cannon Shared Parenting Information Group October 2003 This collection of essays offers valuable insights into different aspects of contact to all those working with families experiencing separation. ChildRIGHT March 2004 The major benefit of this book for me was to highlight the tensions within the different disciplinary perspectives that both explain and complicate the problematic area of continuing contact with children in families that, for whatever reason, become disrupted. The book contains a wealth of data, research studies, literature, ideas and arguments that should be valuable to practitioners as well as academics seeking to engage with the current issues. Fiona Raitt Scolag Legal Journal June 2004 The issue of contact is explored in depth from a variety of perspectives, and results in an informative and compelling read... Family court advisers across the board are likely to find topics and themes that will inform and potentially enhance their professional skills, knowledge and practice. It is the sort of operational and professional issue that CAFCASS, as a social work agency, ought to think long and hard about. All CAFCASS offices should have access to a copy of this book. Jim Lawson, Family Court Adviser Family Court Journal August 2004 ...this collection provides a good review of the social, legal and psychological research that demonstrates the complicated issues faced by the law, by policy-makers and particularly by family members as they come to define and express their children's welfare in the context of contact. Alison Diduck, University College London The British Journal of Sociology May 2005

Notes on Contributors ix
1. Introduction 1(14)
Liz TRILADER
Section 1: Children and Families
2. Contact and Children's Perspectives on Parental Relationships
15(18)
JUDY DUNN
3. Making and Breaking Relationships: Children and their Families
33(14)
CLAIRE HUGHES
4. Children's Contact with Relatives
47(14)
JAN PRYOR
Section 2: The Law and its Limits
5. Contact as a Right and Obligation
61(28)
ANDREW BAINHAM
6. Connecting Contact: Contact in a Private Law Context
89(28)
JONATHAN HERRING
7. Supporting Cross-Household Parenting: Ideas about 'the Family', Policy Formation and Service Development across Jurisdictions
117(16)
MAVIS MACLEAN AND KATRIN MUELLER-JOHNSON
8. Squaring the Circle-the Social, Legal and Welfare Organisation of Contact
133(22)
ADRIAN JAMES
Section 3: Mothers, Fathers and Children
9. Contact: Mothers, Welfare and Rights
155(16)
SHELLEY DAY SCLATER AND FELICITY KAGANAS
10. The Real Love that Dare Not Speak its Name
171(30)
BOB GELDOF
11. Fathers after Divorce
201(22)
BOB SIMPSON, JULIE JESSOP AND PETER MCCARTHY
Section 4: The Hand of the State
12. Contact for Children Subject to State Intervention
223(30)
JO MILES AND BRIDGET LINDLEY
13. Contact and the Adoption Reform
253(22)
JOHN EEKELAAR
14. Adoption and Contact: A Research Review
275(26)
ELSBETH NEIL
Section 5: Challenging Contact
15. Assisted Reproduction and Parental Relationships
301(12)
MARTIN RICHARDS
16. Contact in Containment
313(22)
BELINDA BROOKS-GORDON
17. Making Contact Work in International Cases: Promoting Contact Whilst Preventing International Parental Child Abduction
335(30)
DONNA SMITH
18. Disputed Contact Cases in the Courts
365(22)
ANN BUCHANAN AND JOAN HUNT
19. Working and Not Working Contact after Divorce
387(20)
LIZ TRINDER
Index 407


Andrew Bainham is a Fellow of Christ's College,Cambridge and Reader in Family Law and Policy at the University of Cambridge. Bridget Lindley is a solicitor and family mediator and was a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Family Research, University of Cambridge. Martin Richards is Emeritus Professor of Family Research at the Centre for Family Research at the University of Cambridge. Liz Trinder is a Reader in Family Studies at the School of Geography, Politics and Sociology at Newscastle University.