Climate change? The multiple trajectories of shared care law, policy and social practices
Trinder, Liz
Date: 3 April 2014
Journal
Child and Family Law Quarterly
Publisher
Jordan Publishing
Abstract
This article explores how shared care following parental separation or divorce has developed in law and policy over the past 25 years, identifying five phases of evolution. It traces the development of shared care as social norm and as social practice, and the interrelationship between the research evidence on shared care and case-law ...
This article explores how shared care following parental separation or divorce has developed in law and policy over the past 25 years, identifying five phases of evolution. It traces the development of shared care as social norm and as social practice, and the interrelationship between the research evidence on shared care and case-law and policy. It explores two of the drivers for these developments: the body of research evidence on shared care and the role played by different ideas or ‘frames' surrounding shared care – ‘welfare', ‘rights', ‘risk' and ‘resources' – and concludes that current case-law is significantly more supportive of shared care than either the current policy framework or the existing research base.
Law School
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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