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Domestic violence and child participation : contemporary challenges for the 1980 Hague child abduction convention Michael Freeman and Nicola Taylor

By: Freeman, Michael.
Contributor(s): Taylor, Nicola J.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law.Publisher: Francis & Taylor, 2020Subject(s): LAW | CHILD ABUSE | CHILD EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE | CHILDREN'S RIGHTS | Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction 1980 | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | FAMILY LAW | GUIDELINES | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | JUSTICE | PARENTAL RIGHTS | INTERNATIONALOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/09649069.2020.1751938 | Open access version | Guide to Good Practice on Article 13(1)(b | "The Hague Convention, 1980" In: Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 2020, 42(2): 154-175Summary: This article addresses two contemporary challenges for the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention: (i) domestic violence and (ii) child participation. It also outlines three components of a global socio-legal policy and research initiative undertaken to address these issues and, where relevant, their intersection. The published literature on these topics, including the children’s objections exception, is explored, as are the ways in which these challenges are addressed within some of the 101 Contracting States to the Convention and through the Guide to Good Practice on Article 13(1)(b) of the Convention. Regard is paid to the data provided by the statistical analysis of applications made under the Convention in 2015 by Lowe and Stephens, and the changes which will occur once the Recast of The European Brussels 11a Regulation comes into operation. The likely impact for 1980 Hague Convention abduction proceedings of the UK having left the European Union at 23.00 GMT on 31 January 2020 is contemplated. Other current international initiatives are discussed, including the development of a child-friendly version of the Convention through The International Association of Child Law Researchers. Training is a key to changing attitudes and upskilling family justice professionals to ensure the Convention operates in a fully child-centric way. This will maintain and strengthen the Convention by keeping it ‘fit for purpose’. (Authors' abstract). Record #6874
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Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 2020, 42(2): 154-175

This article addresses two contemporary challenges for the 1980 Hague Child Abduction Convention: (i) domestic violence and (ii) child participation. It also outlines three components of a global socio-legal policy and research initiative undertaken to address these issues and, where relevant, their intersection. The published literature on these topics, including the children’s objections exception, is explored, as are the ways in which these challenges are addressed within some of the 101 Contracting States to the Convention and through the Guide to Good Practice on Article 13(1)(b) of the Convention. Regard is paid to the data provided by the statistical analysis of applications made under the Convention in 2015 by Lowe and Stephens, and the changes which will occur once the Recast of The European Brussels 11a Regulation comes into operation. The likely impact for 1980 Hague Convention abduction proceedings of the UK having left the European Union at 23.00 GMT on 31 January 2020 is contemplated. Other current international initiatives are discussed, including the development of a child-friendly version of the Convention through The International Association of Child Law Researchers. Training is a key to changing attitudes and upskilling family justice professionals to ensure the Convention operates in a fully child-centric way. This will maintain and strengthen the Convention by keeping it ‘fit for purpose’. (Authors' abstract). Record #6874